Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Truce for now but tension simmers in UP’s first family

AKHILESH STEADFAST CM firm on his role in poll ticket distributi­on, but gives uncle Shivpal Yadav his ministries back

- Umesh Raghuvansh­i and Rajesh Kumar Singh letters@hindustant­imes.com

It was not that serious a matter, but the media made it look big. The chief minister had taken some steps following which there were difference­s in the family. The CM made it clear that it was not a family dispute, but a political one AZAM KHAN, senior minister

LUCKNOW: Samajwadi Party chief Mulayam Singh Yadav Friday forged an uneasy truce between his chief minister-son Akhilesh and brother Shivpal to end a damaging power struggle in the party five months ahead of the state election.

The young chief minister, however, looks determined to come out of his powerful father’s shadow and have a say in the poll strategy, decided by Mulayam -- or Netaji as he is known -- and his brothers since the party’s inception in 1992.

“I am ready to return party posts and even portfolios but I must have the power to distribute tickets because the forthcomin­g poll is after all a test for me and my party,” Akhilesh told India TV.

In the evening, he tweeted, “Portfolios will be given back to Mr. Shivpal Singh Yadav.”

That as well as taking back cabinet minister Gayatri Prasad Prajapati, a Shivpal loyalist sacked by Akhilesh, were part of a compromise worked out by Mulayam to end the feuding in the party, sources said.

The SP patriarch announced at the party office in Lucknow that there was no rift in the party and that it would “not split” till he was around.

“We have a big family, difference­s may occur... There is no fight between Shivpal Yadav and Akhilesh,” he told party members.

Difference­s in the Yadav clan have been simmering for a while and can be attributed to a generation­al clash.

Akhilesh, who took over as the youngest chief minister of Uttar Pradesh at 38 in 2012, wants to break from the Samajwadi Party’s identity politics of the past and fight the election on an agenda of developmen­t and clean governance.

Part of the crisis in the party has also been attributed to Akhilesh’s sour ties with Amar Singh, a close aide of his father who returned to Samajwadi Party recently and was made a Rajya Sabha member. Earlier in the day, Akhilesh took a dig at Singh.

“I will no longer refer to that ‘outsider’ as uncle,” he said in a veiled reference to Singh.

Singh is considered close to Shivpal and his return was opposed by Akhilesh and other party leaders. Shivpal has stood firm and said, “Amar Singh can never harm the parivaar. There are many people or “outsiders” around Akhilesh also.”

A bigger point of conflict, however, is the question of who gets to decide the party candidates for the 2017 polls.

Akhilesh is the CM face and he would like to have the final say. He is not keen on re-nominating at least 55 party MLAs, sources said.

But, he is likely to face stiff resistance from Shivpal, who also told India TV that Mulayam wanted him to continue as the UP party chief.

“Ticket distributi­on will be done by Netaji,” said Shivpal, in comments that signaled he might not be ready to cede ground to his nephew.

Shivpal and Akhilesh’s statements came hours after Mulayam, who flew down to Lucknow on Thursday from Delhi, sat down his feuding son and brother to end the family war that is threatenin­g to tear the party asunder.

The difference­s between the two came out in the open when Akhilesh took away three portfolios from Shivpal hours after Mulayam removed the chief minister as the UP party president and named his brother to the position.

Shivpal, however, looked isolated on Friday. Most of the ministers stayed away from him and Ramgopal Yadav, Mulayam’s cousin, confidante and an influentia­l figure in SP, chose to side with Akhilesh.

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