UP: SP grown wiser now to ally with smaller parties in 2022 Assembly polls

Lucknow, Jun 17(UNI) With the rumblings in the BJP due to anti-incumbency, expulsion of MLAs from BSP and the rebels seeking comfort zone, the political parties have kick-started the battle for the 2022 UP Assembly elections. The political activities are likely to gather pace with a sharp dip in the Covid curve.
The Samajwadi Party, the principal opposition in UP, facing existential crisis after three consecutive defeats in UP (2014 Lok Sabha polls, 2017 UP Assembly polls and 2019 Lok Sabha elections) is desperately trying to reinvent itself. The SP, having burnt its fingers after forging alliance with the Congress for the 2017 UP Assembly elections and later with the BSP and Rashtriya Lok Dal for the 2019 Lok Sabha elections, seems to have grown wiser now.

It has ruled out alliances with bigger parties and decided to have a truck only with small parties. The SP has already firmed up alliance with the Rashtriya Lok Dal, (RLD) a predominantly Jat political out-fit.

Newly elected RLD chief Jayant Chaudhary has made it clear that his party will contest the assembly elections in alliance with the SP to send a message to its support base, the Jat community in western UP. RLD has also announced its support to SP candidates in the zila panchayat chairpersons’ elections.

The SP has also firmed up the alliance with the Mahan Dal that is said to be popular among Maurya, Kushwaha and Saini caste voters in western UP districts. The Mahan Dal has also announced its support for the SP in the assembly elections.
The SP sources said the party leadership is worried by not getting the votes of non-Yadav OBCs and non-Jatav SCs in the last three elections which it lost.
“SP has repeatedly committed the mistake to overwhelmingly banking on the Yadav-Muslim vote bank, leaving the rest of the Hindu votes for the BJP,” a senior SP leader said here on Thursday, adding “To bridge this gap, the SP is forging alliance with small caste-based political parties to prevent the ‘Ati Picchda’(Most Backward caste) votes going to the BJP.”
Another SP leader said, “With 11 per cent Yadav votes and 19 per cent Muslim votes, we were actually treating the Muslims as a majority community.”
“The BJP, since 2014, has worked relentlessly to get rid of the ‘Brahmin-Bania’ party tag and succeeded in forging a rainbow alliance of poor and disadvantaged castes among the OBCs and SCs,” another SP leader stated.

He said that during the 2017 UP Assembly elections, the BJP had given as many as 119 tickets to ‘Ati Pichda’ castes like Rajbhar, Kushwaha and Maurya and 69 tickets to non-Jatav Dalit communities, and they reaped rich political dividends.
“The SP, by forging alliance with small caste-based parties, will prevent the BJP from reaping this dividend in 2022,” the SP leader said.

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