Uttar Pradesh: Mulayam
was right, Akhilesh-Rahul alliance couldn't take off
They say well begun is half done. The voters of UP affirmed that the
boys of UP were half baked.
The Samajwadi Party-Congress alliance in Uttar Pradesh began quite well
with the two ‘UP ke ladke’ — Chief Minister Akhilesh Yadav and Congress
Vice-President Rahul Gandhi — clad in white kurtas and black jackets
making a joint public appearance at the Taj Hotel in Lucknow on January
29, 2017.
They say well begun is half done. The voters of UP affirmed that the
boys of UP were half baked.
What went wrong with the alliance? Why did it lack the punch of the
potent Nitish-Lalu combine in Bihar of just 2 years ago?
Let’s start with “Friendly fights” — a euphemism for SP and Congress
putting up candidates in the same constituency and neither “UP boy”
being able to rein in their party. SP patriarch Mulayam Yadav refused to
campaign for alliance candidates, his sole appearances reserved for his
brother Shivpal Yadav, who is estranged from Akhilesh.
And Priyanka Gandhi, perhaps the biggest crowd puller for Congress,
postponed her campaign in the family pocket boroughs of Rae Bareli and
Amethi, because of the “friendly fights”.
So just why did a promising alliance, that had the social equations
firmly on its side, struggle to take off?
During the course of the campaign News18 spoke to a number of people on
the ground, including leaders from the SP and the Congress, the
candidates fielded by these parties, and the strategists working behind
the scenes.
All of them swore that Akhilesh and Rahul did not lack in chemistry. But
both struggled to shed legacy burdens and were up against walls unique
to their parties.
Insiders pointed out that the alliance wasn’t really a coming together
of two political parties but a political partnership between two
individuals.
It didn’t have the endorsement of Mulayam Singh Yadav, who on more than
one occasion openly criticised any pre-poll alliance of his party with
the Congress. Since its creation in 1992, the SP has always fought
elections alone.
An old Mulayam loyalist told News18 how the wily Hindi heartland
politician felt that a pre-poll alliance could only come at the SP’s
cost. “Party ka jhanda girta hai (our flag goes down),” this leader
remembered Mulayam saying.
SP veterans said that by giving 105 seats to the Congress — which today
exists on the margins of UP polity after ruling unchallenged for several
decades — Akhilesh Yadav condemned the SP to irrelevance in those
seats.
“He has given oxygen to a dead Congress at the cost of annihilating
ourselves, which would boomerang in the long term for SP,” this leader
said.
And then there was the ‘little thing’ about UP boys’ political cunning.
Among the backroom boys, there were many who pointed out that the seeds
of discord were evident from the first press conference onwards.
At that press conference, the two ‘UP ke ladke’ appeared in sync with
each other, showering praises on each other, hugging, smiling and
talking about how they exchanged messages and made a perfect
‘made-for-each-other’ picture.
The optics couldn’t have been better until they started taking questions
from the media. Rahul Gandhi sounded impatient and angry while Akhilesh
Yadav appeared unruffled. When questions were asked about what happened
to the ‘27 saal behaal’ plank (the slogan with which the Congress
started its campaign to show how UP has been, in its view, destroyed by
successive SP and BSP governments that ruled the state for 27 years
after dislodging the Congress), Rahul didn’t hesitate in playing down
the achievements during the SP’s tenure.
He said Akhilesh may have worked, but hadn’t really delivered on all
counts. The young Chief Minister, whose campaign pitch has been ‘kaam
bolta hai’ (My work speaks for itself), was quick to defend this
rebuffing of his track record
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