http://www.guardian.co.uk/india/story/0,,2078012,00.html?gusrc=rss&feed=networkfront


Surprise landslide in Indian state election
· Mayawati takes country's most populous state
· Untouchable leader uses cross-caste appeal to win

Randeep Ramesh in Mumbai
Saturday May 12, 2007

Guardian

India's most prominent untouchable leader, a former Delhi school
teacher, yesterday pulled off a surprise landslide election victory in
the country's most populous state - stalling the political ambitions
of the Gandhi family's heir apparent.
Mayawati, who only uses a single name, leads the Bahujan Samaj party
which looks set to sweep the polls in Uttar Pradesh, a northern Indian
state of 170m people and the country's most important bellweather of
public opinion. Uttar Pradesh is a dirt-poor rural backwater that
would be the world's sixth most populous state if it were a nation.
Less than half the women in the state can read or write. It has also
produced most of India's prime ministers.

Mayawati looks able to form a majority without the help of any other
party in the state's 403-seat house. She has been chief minister of
the state three times, but each was a short stint where her party was
a junior partner in a coalition.

Her victory can be traced to her decision two years ago to drop her
anti-upper caste vitriol and court other social groups. The fiery
speaker built an unlikely partnership between Brahmins, at the top of
the Hindu caste hierarchy, and Dalits or untouchables, at the bottom.
Mayawati's strategy saw her party field 86 upper-caste Brahmin
candidates, compared with 91 Dalits.

The pair have traditionally been pitted against each other in the
caste system. However both groups in north India have been steadily
losing influence to the rising middle castes, particularly the Yadavs
- landowning animal herders who have done well in north India in
recent years, in part thanks to positive discrimination.

Their political champion, Mulayam Singh Yadav, who had ruled Uttar
Pradesh for five years by handing jobs and contracts to members of his
own community, yesterday was dethroned - conceding defeat early.

The result was also a lesson for Rahul Gandhi, the son of Sonia Gandhi
who runs the ruling Congress party, who spent a month criss-crossing
Uttar Pradesh but could only hold on to 22 seats.

Political analysts described the result as a bolt from the blue.
"Nobody expected this result and it is one of historic importance. In
building a coalition between Brahmins and Dalits she will have to
govern for both communities - a difference from when politicians
promised to look after just their own caste," said Ramachandra Guha,
author of India After Gandhi: The History of the World's Largest
Democracy. "She may be imperious and whimsical but she has
demonstrated a shrewder political brain than her adversaries."

When last in office Mayawati practised the politics of patronage and
symbolism, handing out jobs on the basis of caste, and built statues
of her political hero B R Ambedkar, a Dalit leader who wrote India's
constitution. Mayawati, 51, remains an enigma in the country's
politics. She rarely gives interviews and was best remembered for her
lavish birthday celebrations. She was also embroiled in corruption
charges in 2003 over a foiled plan to build a shopping mall beside the
Taj Mahal. To supporters she was the wronged party, and her popularity
surged.

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