Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Rahul aides in backchanne­l talks for UP, Bihar alliances

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“While Azad is in talks with the top regional leadership, the senior leaders of these parties are also engaged in their own way to discuss seat-specific issues and hurdles at the local levels. The senior leadership of these four parties meet at a regular interval,” this person said.

A second Congress strategist added that the BSP and SP had so far indicated that they wanted at least 65-70 seats for themselves, keeping 10-15 seats for the Congress and RLD.

“In the last few meetings, the SP and BSP insisted that given the strength of the Congress and RLD, they can’t take more than 10-15 seats. But we have a support base across the state and certainly have the ability to field more candidates. Looks like it will be a hard bargain,” said this person, also on condition of anonymity.

In Bihar, the Congress and the RJD are all set for a pact. While the RJD has repeatedly said no to any link with the JDU, the Congress has received feelers from Nitish Kumar’s camp. A senior Congress leader flew from Delhi to Mumbai last week to meet RJD veteran, Lalu Prasad and, according to an RJD associate, spoke about the growing disenchant­ment about the BJP in the JDU’s rank and file. “Prasad, however, remained unmoved,” said a third Congress leader.

In an earlier interview with HT, Lalu Prasad’s son and RJD president, Tejashwi Prasad Yadav, said his party was ready to consider Ramvilas Paswan’s Lok Janshakti Party (LJP) or Upendra Kushwaha’s Rashtriya Lok Samata Party (RLSP) as partners, but was firmly opposted to Nitish Kumar’s return .

An associate of Nitish Kumar maintained that while seat-sharing talks are on between the BJP and Kumar, the JDU is also perhaps keeping its options open. “Earlier, Kumar had kept the BJP subdued. But in this current government, the BJP certainly wields an upper hand as they know that Kumar has burned his bridges with the Opposition parties,” he said on condition of anonymity.

JDU leader KC Tyagi was confident that the BJP and JDU would be able to forge an alliance. “In the next few rounds, the two sides will seal the pact,” he told HT.

The Congress had agreed to a seat-sharing agreement with the SP in the last assembly elections in Uttar Pradesh, where the BJP coasted to a comfortabl­e victory last year. In Bihar for the 2015 state assembly polls, it forged an alliance with the RJD and JDU and the pact paid off, with their “grand alliance” stopping the BJP from coming to power, until Nitish Kumar’s volte face in 2017.

Afzal Amanullah, a political analyst and former parliament­ary affairs secretary, said, “UP, Bihar and Maharashtr­a would be the key states that may decide the fate of the next election. If the Opposition wants to do well, they have to get a solid alliance in these states. But they will also face a lot of challenges.”

The Congress had agreed to a seat-sharing agreement with the SP in the last assembly elections in Uttar Pradesh, where the BJP coasted to a comfortabl­e victory last year. In Bihar for the 2015 state assembly polls, it forged an alliance with the RJD and JDU and the pact paid off, with their “grand alliance” stopping the BJP from coming to power, until Nitish Kumar’s volte face in 2017. Sadak Yojana (PMGSY) launched by him during his stint as a rural developmen­t minister in Atal Bihari Vajpayee’s government has become hugely popular among parliament­arians.

“The Pradhan Mantri Gram Sadak Yojana came into being due to the efforts of Naiduji. At a time when political discourse was centred around train stoppages, he ensured that leaders began to think more about roads and other forms of connectivi­ty,” Modi said.

The Pradhan Mantri Gram Sadak Yojana came into being due to the efforts of Naiduji. At a time when political discourse was centred around train stoppages, he ensured that leaders began to think more about roads and other forms of connectivi­ty

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