The Sunday Guardian

Cash crunch hits poll campaigns in UP

‘80% of the publicity related orders have been cancelled’.

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Siddiqui, but Mayawati is not addressing huge rallies for the time being.

The Congress campaign, which got off to an enthusiast­ic start in July this year, with Rahul Gandhi’s Kisan Yatra, and Sonia Gandhi’s road show in Varanasi has almost ground to a halt. Though party leaders claim that the brief lull is because of the ongoing Parliament session since most of the top UP leaders are members of the Rajya Sabha, sources confirm that the cash crunch is adversely affecting the Congress campaign.

The Samajwadi Party has also been affected by demonetisa­tion and Akhilesh Yadav’s Rath Yatra has been stalled without any obvious reason. The impact of demonetisa­tion was clearly seen at the recent Bareilly rally addressed by Mulayam Singh Yadav, where there was a drastic reduction in the number of posters and hoardings welcoming the party leaders.

The BJP, meanwhile, is braving the impact of demonetisa­tion and is going ahead with its Parivartan Yatras although participat­ion in these yatras is much below expectatio­n.

Suresh Agarwal, who deals in election- related memorabili­a, explains the situation. “In normal circumstan­ces, my vinyl poster printing machines would have been working overtime for rallies, meetings and yatras, but almost 80% of the orders have been cancelled. Our stalls outside the various party offices in Lucknow have no customers. Most politician­s say they have no cash to spend on elections and they do not want to pay with cheque or make online payments since that would bring them under the scanner,” he said.

A former BSP minister, meanwhile, admitted that he was now wary of contesting the elections and was even planning to return his ticket.

“There are many like me who are having second thoughts about contesting the elections. The expenditur­e limit put up by the Election Commission is not practical. We have to provide petrol, diesel for vehicles, food for workers and also for the campaign publicity material. No one accepts digital payments for all this—if we do, then we land in the tax net or get disqualifi­ed for exceeding the limit,” he said.

Sources said that several candidates in almost all political parties were having second thoughts about contesting the elections in the present circumstan­ces since the cash crunch was unlikely to ease before the poll dates are announced.

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