[The Congress’s success in the latest round of state elections has
compelled the Samajwadi Party and the Bahujan Samaj Party to ensure that
the grand old party does not piggyback on them to stage a revival in Uttar
Pradesh. A Congress revival would not only hurt the BJP but damage these
two regional parties as well.

The Congress’s victory in these recent elections has reduced the salience
of the factor of territorial compatibility, an idea that the scholar E
Sridharan employs to theorise about how a set of parties would be likely to
combine if it is vital to defeat a political behemoth.

Together, the Samajwadi Party and the Bahujan Samaj Party pack enough punch
to make a major dent in the BJP’s tally of 71 parliamentary seats in Uttar
Pradesh. Still, they could have benefited by bringing in the Congress.
Psephologist Sanjay Kumar, director, Centre for the Study of Developing
Societies, calculated for Outlook magazine that an alliance of the
Congress, Samajwadi Party and Bahujan Samaj Party could win 57 of Uttar
Pradesh’s 80 Lok Sabha seats. An alliance of only the Samajwadi Party and
the Bahujan Samaj Party could win 41 seats to the BJP’s 37.]

https://scroll.in/article/909234/why-mayawati-and-akhilesh-yadav-kept-the-congress-out-of-their-alliance-in-uttar-pradesh?fbclid=IwAR3HKd5eieXjlqctRqEkhwrAmHxaj8sWKZwen7sdCCkhUuijaFQZKeD0qAg

Why Mayawati and Akhilesh Yadav kept the Congress out of their alliance in
Uttar Pradesh
And why Shiv Sena is threatening to do the same to the BJP in Maharashtra.

Why Mayawati and Akhilesh Yadav kept the Congress out of their alliance in
Uttar Pradesh
Akhilesh Yadav's Samajwadi Party and Mayawati's Bahujan Samaj Party have
entered into an alliance for the upcoming general election. | IANS

10 hours ago

Ajaz Ashraf

Ideological compatibility is considered vital for a national party and a
regional one to be able to forge an electoral alliance. But this
proposition is being turned on its head. Ideological similarity now seems
to matter far less for regional parties than the desire to pressure the
Bharatiya Janata Party and the Congress and check the expansion of the two
main national parties.

This is the theme of the alliance between the Bahujan Samaj Party and the
Samajwadi Party in Uttar Pradesh that was formalised on January 12. The two
parties and the Congress have been insisting that their primary goal is to
vanquish the BJP, and prevent it from corroding democracy and secularism
any further.

Yet, the Bahujan Samaj Party and the Samajwadi Party have excluded the
Congress from the partnership. Moreover, the alliance’s leaders, Mayawati
and Akhilesh Yadav, have been critical of both the BJP and the Congress.

Similarly, in Maharashtra, the Shiv Sena has taken to relentlessly sniping
at its ally, the BJP. No two parties in India are as alike in their
anti-minority, pro-Hindu outlook as the Sena and the BJP. Yet, the Sena
says it wants to contest the 2019 election alone. It is, of course, hard to
determine if this is just a strategy to wrest more seats from the BJP.

There are two opposite factors driving regional outfits to bolster their
strength against the national parties.

Checking Congress’s revival
The Congress’s success in the latest round of state elections has compelled
the Samajwadi Party and the Bahujan Samaj Party to ensure that the grand
old party does not piggyback on them to stage a revival in Uttar Pradesh. A
Congress revival would not only hurt the BJP but damage these two regional
parties as well.

The Congress’s victory in these recent elections has reduced the salience
of the factor of territorial compatibility, an idea that the scholar E
Sridharan employs to theorise about how a set of parties would be likely to
combine if it is vital to defeat a political behemoth.

Together, the Samajwadi Party and the Bahujan Samaj Party pack enough punch
to make a major dent in the BJP’s tally of 71 parliamentary seats in Uttar
Pradesh. Still, they could have benefited by bringing in the Congress.
Psephologist Sanjay Kumar, director, Centre for the Study of Developing
Societies, calculated for Outlook magazine that an alliance of the
Congress, Samajwadi Party and Bahujan Samaj Party could win 57 of Uttar
Pradesh’s 80 Lok Sabha seats. An alliance of only the Samajwadi Party and
the Bahujan Samaj Party could win 41 seats to the BJP’s 37.

Of course, including the Congress in their alliance would have left the
Bahujan Samaj Party and the Samajwadi Party with fewer seats to contest,
since the Congress would have wanted 10-12 seats. But it is equally true
that the two regional parties would rather settle for smaller gains and
uncertainty in the present than to become a catalyst for the Congress’s
revival and risk their future in Uttar Pradesh.

Sensing BJP’s vulnerability
It is with an eye on the future that the Sena has deliberately strained its
old alliance with the BJP, going so far as to call Prime Minister Narendra
Modi names. The Sena’s goal is to regain supremacy in Maharashtra.

After the BJP’s crushing victory in the 2014 general election, it demanded
a greater share of seats from the Sena when the Assembly polls came around
later that year. Having failed to come to an agreement, they fought the
election separately, but came together to form a coalition government.

The BJP bagged the chief ministership as it had nearly twice as many seats
as the Shiv Sena. The Sena was in effect relegated to No 2 in the Hindutva
alliance system of Maharashtra, its only turf.

>From this perspective, the latest state elections have had an opposite
impact on the BJP to that on the Congress – the results were taken as
evidence of the BJP weakening. The reason Sena chief Uddhav Thackeray has
been so outspoken in his attacks on the BJP is that he likely calculates
the saffron party would be reluctant to go it alone in 2019 and would,
therefore, accept the Sena’s supremacy in Maharashtra.

If the Sena chooses to contest alone, this could be both to its own
detriment and that of the BJP’s. But then, Thackeray would have protected
his party’s Hindu base from being completely encroached upon by the BJP.
Like the Samajwadi Party and the Bahujan Samaj Party, the Sena is willing
to court losses now for a better future.

This strategy is informed by the fact that the survival of these parties
depends on their performance in one state. Modi’s politics have taught them
a rude lesson: it is in the nature of national parties to expand and gobble
up regional allies in the hope of mustering majority or substantially
increasing their numbers so as to call the shots in a coalition government.

Seeking an alternative
It is, therefore, imperative for regional parties to prevent the Congress
from regaining lost ground and the BJP from conquering new territory. This
is what Telangana Chief Minister K Chandrashekar Rao’s proposed Federal
Front seeks to achieve.

In late December, Rao met Chief Ministers Naveen Patnaik of Odisha and
Mamata Banerjee of West Bengal, to articulate the need for the Federal
Front. Rao’s meeting with Mayawati and Yadav did not materialise. But Yadav
welcomed Rao’s initiative and said he would fly to Hyderabad to discuss the
idea with the chief minister.

In 2014, despite the Modi wave, the five potential members of the Federal
Front – Samajwadi Party, Bahujan Samaj Party, Biju Janata Dal, Trinamool
Congress and Telangana Rashtra Samithi – together took 70 seats. Assume the
Trinamool and the Biju Janata Dal hold on to their tallies of 34 and 20
seats. Add the 41 seats Kumar gives the Bahujan Samaj Party-Samajwadi
alliance in Uttar Pradesh, and the 15 seats Rao’s party is expected to win.
This means the front could get 110 seats, give or take a few.

It is argued that such a performance is notional as the front would come
apart in case the BJP-led National Democratic Alliance is within striking
distance of power. After all, Patnaik and Rao are not crucially dependent
on religious minorities and may not be able to resist the temptation of
flirting with the BJP. It is this fear that has made the front uncertain,
although Patnaik recently insisted that he wants to remain equidistant from
the Congress and the BJP.

Whether the Federal Front materialises before the election, it will
certainly take shape later should the BJP not be in a position to form the
government and the Congress fails to perform well – not an unlikely
scenario.

The front would then become a magnet for other regional parties, from both
BJP and Congress camps. They would call the shots, even bag the post of
prime minister.

Indeed, the alliance of the Bahujan Samaj Party and the Samajwadi Party
enhances the significance of the regional in the national. It also
represents the assertion of the Other Backward Classes and the Dalits,
because of whom regional parties acquired prominence in India. Both these
aspects of the alliance could well fructify in 2019.

Ajaz Ashraf is a journalist in Delhi.
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Peace Is Doable

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