Tag: Mayawati

  • Mayawati on Constitution: BJP, Congress have made Constitution casteist, communal through amendments: Mayawati

    BSP president Mayawati on Tuesday said BJP and Congress governments have made the Constitution “casteist, communal and capitalistic” to a large extent through various amendments. At a press conference here, Mayawati said both parties show copies of the Constitution inside and outside Parliament and appear to be chips of the same block.

    “Their thinking also seems to be similar and both of them have made this Constitution a casteist, communal and capitalist Constitution to a large extent through various amendments,” the former Uttar Pradesh chief minister said.

    It is no longer the egalitarian and secular Constitution of Bhimrao Ambedkar, she said.

    “The way these people are playing with the Indian Constitution for political gains is not at all appropriate,” she added.

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    Mayawati also said the BJP and Congress governments did not implement the Mandal Commission report providing reservation benefits to Other Backward Classes (OBCs).

  • Mayawati reverses decision; reinstates nephew Akash Anand as political heir

    Reversing the decision, Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) chief and former Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Mayawati on Sunday declared Akash Anand, as her successor. Akash Anand will take charge of the national coordinator, informed BSP reader Sarvar Malik.

    Earlier, BSP supremo Mayawati removed nephew Akash Anand as her political heir and from party post till he becomes “mature”. Akash Anand was designated as the National Coordinator of the BSP. The party on Saturday released a list of 13 star campaigners for the upcoming Uttarakhand Assembly by-elections. Party chief Mayawati and her nephew Akash Anand are on the list.

    Why was Akash Anand removed from the post?The decision by Mayawati to remove her nephew came after Akash Anand was drawing flak over his aggressive language in his addresses. An FIR was lodged against him in Sitapur when he called the central government a government of atankwadis (terrorists).

    “This government is a bulldozer government and a government of traitors. The party that leaves its youth hungry and enslaves its elderly is a terrorist government. Taliban runs such a government in Afghanistan,” he had said in criticism of the BJP-led state government.

    Besides Anand, BSP candidates Mahendra Yadav, Shyam Awasthi, and Akshay Kalra and rally organiser Vikas Rajvanshi were booked in the matter, Superintendent of Police (Sitapur) Chakresh Mishra had then said.

    The case was registered under sections IPC 171C (undue influence at elections), 153B (imputation, assertions prejudicial to national integration) and 188 (disobedience to order duly promulgated by public servant) and section 125 of the Representation of People Act.About BSP’s key meeting:The BSP supremo called a meeting on Sunday to review the party’s defeat in the 2024 Lok Sabha elections.

    The meeting to be held at the BSP office will mainly focus on why the party could not win even a single seat in the general elections in the country. The discussion will also be held on how things can improve in the upcoming 2027 assembly elections.

    Voting for the assembly by-polls in the Badrinath and Manglaur seats will be held on July 10.

    The Badrinath seat fell vacant after Congress MLA Rajendra Bhandari resigned and joined the BJP.

    The Manglaur seat fell vacant after the death of Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) MLA Sarwat Karim Ansari.

    Votes will be counted on July 13.

    (with agency inputs)

  • BSP quite confident and competent this time: Akash Anand

    BSP National Co-ordinator and party chief Mayawati’s nephew Akash Anand is virtually leading the party campaign in the 2024 Lok Sabha elections as she appears to have taken a back seat. Anand spoke with Rakesh Mohan Chaturvedi on a host of issues.Q: BSP had contested the 2019 general elections in alliance with SP and RLD, winning 10 seats. Why fight alone this time?A: If you look at 2014 and 2019 data, we were hovering around 19% percent. On cutting into Opposition votes, we want to make absolutely clear that when we contest alone we maintain our vote-share but in alliance our partner cuts into our vote-share, helping BJP. We are quite confident and competent this time.Does BSP feel that though it is able to transfer its vote to its pre-poll ally, its partners like SP or RLD do not?Historically, it is very clear that BSP is able to divert its votes to its alliance partner, but the same cannot be said for the other side.What about the perception that BSP contesting alone will cut into non-BJP votes and thus help BJP?It is a negative way of putting this that BSP will cut into Opposition votes. Voters are not anybody’s heirloom. We are all political parties and we all deserve to go out and ask for votes and let the voters decide.

    Does BSP apprehend that Congress will wean away its votes?

    No. I think there is a principle and fundamental challenge with Congress. We don’t align with that- whether it was about giving reservations or representation to our people or paying respects to Baba Saheb Ambedkar, Congress failed miserably on these issues.How do you see INDIA bloc, especially Congress and SP contesting together in UP?I think they are becoming a distraction for the voters. They will eventually end up helping BJP win seats, rather than the Opposition. Voters deserve the right to know exactly where a party stands on issues that matter to them and Congress has not been able to put that across categorically- on free rations, employment, law and order. They are in power in some states and are a part of the system that believes in free giving schemes. They are not discussing the real challenges facing the people.One of the main poll planks of BJP and Prime Minister Narendra Modi is the welfare schemes like free foodgrains, affordable housing, Ujjwala and so on. How do you see that?Whenever there is a free scheme- whether free rations or subsidy on LPG cylinders, I think addressing the base price and backend cost is more important than subsidies. BJP is providing free rations to 80 Cr which is going to cost Rs 2 Lakh Crore of taxpayers money. That is the cost borne by the taxpayers, especially the middle class…. Nobody has asked them if this is something that is right… Where the real issue lies is that if this money had been used to convert those 80 crore people into employed people that would have added a minimum of Rs 2 Lakh Crore to the GDP.

    Are you suggesting that the free foodgrain scheme should be discontinued?Of course, the government should phase it out. If not immediately, then slowly. Government should focus on creating employment, work on the backend cost, and on reducing prices of gas cylinders. Government should focus on that rather than give subsidies. This will lower the burden on taxpayers and reduce the deficit.

    There is a perception that with the growth of BJP since 2014 Mayawati has gone into the background and is not very active in politics. Why?Ma’m has always believed in ground work rather than creating perceptions. She believes in handling the issues upfront. That is what she has done in the past decade. It is a matter of strategy and a very conscious step… On the ground our cadre remains with us and our vote-share has not moved much.

    BSP has been on the decline since 2014. It needs the extra votes apart from its 19% core votes.Our core voter is with us. As for the floating voters, yes there has been little bit of weaning away. Now we are trying to recapture the mind-space of new voters, we feel we will get the support back.

    BSP has fielded many candidates from the minority community that many see as cutting into the Opposition votes and helping BJP.That may not be the right statement. Just like other parties, we are trying to get votes. It could also be said that they are cutting into our votes. Congress and SP have learnt that if we give space to minorities in Parliament, they will also have to do so.

    In 2007, BSP formed a government through social engineering when Brahmins voted for BSP. After the Ram temple issue gained traction, this voter has moved away.I think the voters will realise the core issues. BSP stands for employment, safety and security of all, health and welfare of all, including Brahmins…. The voter is clear that they want a government that can help secure their future, rather than on sentiments.

    You think the government should stop subsidies?Certainly, we need to actually grow our economy. Our dependency on China is growing. We should be focusing on production inhouse, instead of being import surplus… Subsidy is a temporary solution; only a band-aid on a deep cut.

    There was a charge that during Mayawati’s government, a lot of taxpayers’ money was spent on constructing parks.If Ram temple is justified, our parks are a way of paying homage to our leaders…. We are not opposing Ram temple, Babri mosque, or BJP’s tribute to Atal ji. It is very unfair to oppose BSP when it is paying respects to its leaders.

    BJP has assured that if it comes to power for the third time, it will not do away with reservations.One should look at their track record on what they have committed and what they have delivered on the ground. It is very difficult for the common people to take their word on whether they will or will not change a certain section of the Constitution. There were a lot of promises around employment, development, and defending the country’s borders. The government has successfully created a narrative on how well they have done rather than on what has been done on the ground.

    In case BJP gets an overwhelming majority, do you apprehend they will do away with reservations?They have been very vocal on the ground (about it). Videos of their leaders saying 400 is only a number, the real issue is to change the Constitution. I think it is there and it is for the people to realize this. Changing the Constitution without an Opposition that is strong enough to question it is very dangerous. We are not against amendments in keeping with the changing times but there should be a healthy debate and a consensus.

    BJP has taken on the Opposition on dynasty politics. You are in a prominent position in BSP and you are related to Mayawati.Empires have been built again and again over the ages. Even in BJP, which takes a lot of pride in not being into dynastic politics, apart from Modi ji- I cannot even count Amit Shah as his son is in a powerful position- the second and even the third generation of all their leaders are active in the party. It is alright for them to participate but one’s rise and fall depends on one’s caliber. If you are not capable, people will oust you. It is best for the people to decide.

  • Uttar Pradesh: After failed BSP experiment in 2019, SP pins hope on Congress tie-up to stop BJP juggernaut in UP

    The coming general election may throw some surprising results in Uttar Pradesh with the SP-BSP alliance now replaced by the SP-Congress pact under the INDIA bloc. The Samajwadi Party-Bahujan Samaj Party alliance in 2019 had offered some resistance to the BJP on a handful of seats in the western and eastern parts of UP, but failed to make a big impact.

    With BSP supremo Mayawati deciding to duke it out alone this time, it will be up to the SP and Congress to stop the marauding juggernaut of the NDA, which has now has RLD on its side, as well as a number of caste-based regional parties in the Poorvanchal region.

    In the 2014 Lok Sabha elections, the BJP and allies won 73 out of 80 Lok Sabha seats in the state. The party ceded some ground in the 2019 general election, when the opposition parties scraped their combined tally to 16.

    Even with the conventional anti-incumbency apprehensions at work, the saffron party laid its claim on the state winning 62 seats, bolstered further by two more won by its ally Apna Dal (Sonelal).

    In 2019, the maximum seats — 23 — for the BJP came from the state’s western part, where the SP-BSP alliance could manage to win only four seats each. The BSP won Saharanpur, Bijnor, Amroha and Nagina (SC seat) in the western UP, while the Samajwadi Party emerged victorious in Sambhal, Moradabad, Mainpuri (first held by Mulayam Singh Yadav then by Dimple Yadav in a bypoll) and Rampur that year. The central region of the state has prominent parliamentary constituencies of Amethi and Rae Bareli — both long considered bastions of the Congress.

    In 2019, former Congress president Sonia Gandhi retained her Rae Bareli seat, while her son Rahul Gandhi lost the long held Amethi constituency to Union minister Smriti Irani.

    Defence minister Rajnath Singh won from Lucknow.

    The BSP won only one seat from this region in Ritesh Pandey, who bagged Ambedkarnagar Lok Sabha constituency. The SP scored a zilch.

    The BJP won 13 seats from the region, which includes the coveted Faizabad Lok Sabha seat, the epicentre of a Hindu reverie that drowned parts of the nation in a collective religious fervour after the Ram Temple consecration.

    Varanasi, represented by Prime Minister Narendra Modi in the Lok Sabha, is one of the 30 seats in the eastern part of the state.

    From this region, the BSP won five seats, while the SP won one, Azamgarh. Apna Dal (Sonelal) won two seats from here.

    The Bundelkhand region was swept in 2019 by the BJP, which won all four Lok Sabha seats of Jhansi, Banda, Hamirpur, and Jalaun-SC.

    The parched Bundelkhand region has been seeing the start of some irrigation projects and its residents getting safe drinking water.

    Expressways, new airports in different parts of the UP have narrowed the regional disparity the state has witnessed for a long time.

  • Lok Sabha Polls: Congress demands 20 seats in Uttar Pradesh; Samajwadi Party finds it ‘unreasonable’

    Congress has sought 20 of 80 Lok Sabha seats in Uttar Pradesh from Samajwadi Party, a demand which the regional party found ‘unreasonable’. The two parties are likely to meet again on Thursday to take talks forward, according to some leaders.

    According to people present at the second formal round of seat-sharing talks on Wednesday, Congress and SP discussed a seat-sharing formula and agreed ‘winnability’ should be the main criterion for deciding which party gets which seat. Congress won only Rae Bareli Lok Sabha seat in 2019.

    A senior leader, who did not wish to be identified, told ET: “The exact number of seats were discussed. Congress has sought 20 seats. The list of seats was also discussed. Both parties have decided to meet again, and hold talks seat by seat.” There was no discussion on an alliance with BSP or RLD. A senior leader said, “RLD is Samajwadi Party’s ally. It is clear that any alliance talk of RLD will be with Samajwadi Party and not Congress.” RLD has already held talks with SP. Though Mayawati has announced that BSP would contest elections alone, Congress is keen on a grand alliance in UP because it feels that it is the only way the Opposition could give BJP a tough contest.In 2019, BJP secured 49.56% vote share, BSP 19.26%, SP 17.96% and Congress 6.31%. Though the influence of SP and BSP have declined considerably, a united Opposition could change the equation. Emerging from the meeting, senior Congress leader Salman Khurshid told journalists, “we held a good round of talks… We put forward our wish list before each other and compared the details of each seat with each other and we hope that from their side we will receive more feedback before we can reach a final discussion.” On questions regarding BSP’s inclusion, Khurshid said the leadership would handle it. He said Congress hoped that the alliance would be finalised before the Bharat Jodo Nyaya Yatra reaches UP.

    SP MP Ram Gopal Yadav said, “we have come halfway and will complete the entire journey soon.” UP Congress chief Ajay Rai and MLA Aradhana Mishra too joined the discussions. SP MP Javed Ali Khan, former SP MLC and a close aide of Akhilesh Yadav, Udaiveer Singh, and Ram Gopal Yadav represented SP. After the meeting with Congress, SP went into a huddle.