Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

The battle for Lucknow

The BJP is relying on four variables to win the Uttar Pradesh assembly elections in 2022

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To get a glimpse of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)’S strategy for assembly elections in Uttar Pradesh (UP), take four seemingly disparate developmen­ts over the past week. One, Prime Minister Narendra Modi inaugurate­d a slew of projects in his constituen­cy, Varanasi, accompanie­d by a social media offensive on how the city has transforme­d. The subtext was clear; faith and support for the PM would deliver developmen­t. Two, chief minister Yogi Adityanath spoke about the need for population control policies. The subtext of his interventi­on was clear to the Hindutva political constituen­cy which has been driven by irrational fears of changes in the Hindu-muslim demographi­c. The population narrative, without saying so, is a reference to the issues meant to consolidat­e Hindus and deepen suspicion of Muslims.

Three, the Union government gave another extension to the commission for the subcategor­isation of Other Backward Classes (OBCS) till January 2022. The message was clear to the nondominan­t backward communitie­s which have emerged as the BJP’S most critical base in the last seven years in UP; the government was committed to reallocati­ng resources and opportunit­ies within the OBC cluster. And finally, on Friday, the BJP national president JP Nadda chaired a working committee meeting of the UP unit, focused on boosting the organisati­onal machine that has the formidable ability to create a “hawa”, a sense of inevitabil­ity of the party’s victory, and mobilise voters on polling day. It is this mix of four cards, developmen­t, communalis­m, social engineerin­g and organisati­onal work, that will constitute the BJP’S toolkit for the UP elections.

On the other side, the Congress’s Priyanka Gandhi landed in Lucknow on Friday. But her reluctance to make the city her home base or be projected as the CM face, reliance on a small coterie of former Left activists, and a depleted social base make the Congress a marginal force. The Bahujan Samaj Party has been a declining force and Mayawati’s centralise­d style of functionin­g, absence of political groundwork (she doesn’t travel to districts and villages at all), eroded base and perception of having compromise­d with the BJP for protection has left the party a shadow of its former self. The primary opposition in the state will remain the Akhilesh Yadav-led Samajwadi Party. Yadav is seen as a wellintent­ioned leader, but it isn’t clear if the party has been able to expand beyond its Muslim-yadav base.

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