Business Standard

Cong under fire from its ‘friends’

Mayawati, Akhilesh accuse the party of creating confusion in UP; alliance with Left in Bengal in trouble

- ARCHIS MOHAN

Existing and potential allies of the Congress have bitterly criticised the party in the last 48 hours for its unbending attitude in putting together alliances to defeat the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)-led National Democratic Alliance in the 2019 Lok Sabha polls.

However, Congress leaders said they are working to a well-thoughtout plan, at least in Uttar Pradesh, to keep the BJP’s tally down and pressure Mayawati-led Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) to put up an “honest” fight in the state. People close to Mayawati are currently facing probes by central investigat­ing agencies.

On Monday, BSP chief Mayawati and her ally Samajwadi Party (SP) President Akhilesh Yadav accused the Congress of trying to spread “confusion” among the electorate in Uttar Pradesh. The state could make or break the BJP’s chances of returning to power at the Centre.

The SP, the BSP and the Rashtriya Lok Dal have an alliance. The Congress is not part of that alliance. It is trying to effect alliances with smaller parties.

On Monday, Congress general secretary for Uttar Pradesh east Priyanka Gandhi Vadra began a much-publicised tour of Allahahbad and Varanasi. The party has also announced that it will not field candidates in at least seven Lok Sabha seats in UP, which was met with scorn by the BSP chief.

"The Congress is free to field its candidates on all the 80 seats in Uttar Pradesh alone. In other words, our alliance is capable enough of defeating the BJP. The Congress should refrain from spreading confusion about leaving seven seats for the alliance," Mayawati tweeted.

She also said, "The BSP would like to make it clear once again that there is no alliance or understand­ing with the Congress in Uttar Pradesh and anywhere in the country."

“Our party workers should not succumb to confusion being spread almost every day by the Congress,” she said. The

BSP is exploring alliances with non-Congress, non

BJP parties elsewhere in the country, including in Punjab, Andhra Pradesh and Haryana.

In a tweet, Yadav supported Mayawati. "In Uttar Pradesh, the SP,

BSP and RLD alliance is capable of defeating the

BJP. The Congress party need not spread any kind of confusion."

Apart from the seven it plans to leave for the SP-BSP-RLD alliance, the Congress has announced leaving two seats for the breakaway faction of the Apna Dal, and entered into an electoral agreement with the Jan Adhikar Party.

On Mayawati’s and Yadav's comments, senior Congress leader Ghulam Nabi Azad, who until recently was party in-charge for UP, said: "Let them do and say whatever they want, but we will do what is best for our party."

In Bihar, Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD) leader Tejashwi Yadav wants the Congress to sacrifice some from its share of seats to accommodat­e allies. On Saturday, he called upon the Congress to let go of some of its seats in the larger interest of "saving democracy and the Constituti­on".

The RJD leader said his party, despite emerging the largest party in the 2015 Bihar Assembly polls, made Nitish Kumar chief minister of the state. There are multiple claimants in Bihar to the 40 Lok Sabha seats of the state, and the RJD is contesting on lesser number of seats than it did in 2014.

In Uttar Pradesh, the Congress strategist­s say the party will field candidates on 68 seats, but the focus would be on the 29 seats where it has a good cadre base and where it has performed well since 2009. However, its other focus is to ensure it puts up a good fight in seats that the BSP is contesting as part of its alliance. This is ostensibly being done to reclaim its support base among Dalits, but the underlying objective is to keep the BSP under pressure to put up a stronger fight.

According to the SP-BSP-RLD deal, the SP will contest 37 Lok Sabha seats in Uttar Pradesh and the BSP 38, leaving three for the Ajit Singh-led RLD and two for Sonia Gandhi (Raebareli) and Rahul Gandhi (Amethi).

The seats where the Congress has offered not to field any candidates are Mainpuri, Kannauj and

Firozabad, all held by the SP, and those likely to be contested by the BSP chief and RLD chief Ajit Singh and his son Jayant Chaudhary. The Congress said it was reciprocat­ing the gesture of the alliance, which is not fielding candidates in Raebareli and Amethi for it.

The Congress alliance with the Left in West Bengal was also seemingly unravellin­g. But, Congress President Rahul Gandhi and Communist Party of India (Marxist) chief Sitaram Yechury are likely to meet to iron out the rough spots even as the Congress is set to announce its list of candidates for the polls. The Congress is upset that the Left parties announced their list of candidates without consulting it.

The Congress has struck alliances in Tamil Nadu, Maharashtr­a, Jharkhand and Karnataka with regional parties.

"The Congress is free to field its candidates on all the 80 seats in UP... Our alliance (of SP-BSPRLD) is capable of defeating the BJP. The Congress should refrain from spreading confusion about leaving the seven seats for the alliance" MAYAWATI BSP supremo "Let them do and say whatever they want, but we will do what is best for our party" GHULAM NABI AZAD

Congress leader

 ?? PHOTO: PTI ?? Congress leader Priyanka Gandhi Vadra after offering prayers at Bade Hanuman temple in Prayagraj on Monday. Later, she embarked on a 100-km boat ride in the Ganga to Varanasi
PHOTO: PTI Congress leader Priyanka Gandhi Vadra after offering prayers at Bade Hanuman temple in Prayagraj on Monday. Later, she embarked on a 100-km boat ride in the Ganga to Varanasi
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India