The Asian Age

What went wrong

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since we have come to know of this now... Though there is still a long time ( ahead of the polls), we will redraw our strategy keeping this factor in mind.” He stressed that those who wanted developmen­t were still with the saffron party. These bypolls results have come at a time when the BJP was celebratin­g its first year of power in UP.

Both the seats saw a consolidat­ion of OBC, dalit and Muslim votes. The poll results also raised the quesion of how much the saffron cadre worked this time as the voting percentage­s in both seats were significan­tly lower compared to last time. Gorakhpur saw voting of 47.45 per cent, compared to 54.64 per cent last time. Similarly, in Phulpur, it was 37.39 per cent this time, compared to 50.20 per cent earlier.

The BJP also feels that only attacking the SP during the campaign was a miscalcula­tion as the BSP also played a crucial role in the BJP’s defeat. There is also a view in the saffron camp that if the SP and BSP stitch up an alliance in 2019, it will massively dent the BJP’s poll prospects of continuing in power after the next general election.

While the BJP had won Phulpur only in 2014, losing Gorakhpur was a rude shock to the BJP, which had held this prestigiou­s constituen­cy, which has the famous Gorakhdham Matth, since 1991. The parliament­ary seat has been won by representa­tive of this matth — Mahant Avaidyanat­h and then Yogi Adityanath. After the defeat, voices started growing in the state unit about “possible internal sabotage” and wrong selection of candidates. BJP spokesman G. V. L. Narasimha Rao claimed that voters seem to want to bring some amount of “political equilibriu­m” by giving encouragem­ent to the defeated parties as the saffron party has been winning Assembly elections. He noted that the BJP has lost in bypolls held earlier as well, but continues to win Assembly elections.

“In a general election people vote to elect a government and the BJP has always been the favourite as people want a guarantee of good governance, which Prime Minister Narendra Modi has brought in politics. Bypolls have no impact on the stability of a government, whether at the Centre or in a state,” he said.

The SP had polled 22.2 per cent votes and the BSP 19.6 per cent when a BJP wave swept the state in 2014. The two parties had polled over 20 per cent votes each in the 2017 Assembly polls. The BJP alliance had got over 42 per cent voteshare in 2014.

Deputy chief minister Keshav Prasad Maurya said the reasons for the unsatisfac­tory performanc­e would be reviewed and stocktakin­g of the social and other factors that came into play in these polls would be done.

“The BJP had won the Phulpur seat for the first time in 2014 but Gorakhpur has been with the party since long... We will have to see where the social factors went against us or where workers did not work as hard as expected of them,” Mr Maurya said.

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