113 upper caste, 97 Muslim candidates in BSP list

87 Dalit and 106 OBC nominees in the list; “wasting vote” on SP would help BJP, warns Mayawati.

January 08, 2017 05:02 pm | Updated November 28, 2021 10:11 pm IST - Lucknow

BSP supremo Mayawati addresses a meeting at the party office in Lucknow on Sunday.

BSP supremo Mayawati addresses a meeting at the party office in Lucknow on Sunday.

 

The BSP on Sunday announced candidates for 101 Assembly seats in Uttar Pradesh, completing the exercise for all but two of the 403 constituencies, fielding 12 more Muslim candidates this time to ensure Dalit-Muslim consolidation in a bid to wrest power from Samajwadi Party.

Candidates for the two remaining seats in Sonebhadra district will be finalised after a decision is taken as to whether they are general or reserved for ST, the BSP said in a release in Lucknow on Sunday.

Out of the 403 seats up for grabs, the BSP had prepared a final list comprising 97 Muslim candidates (12 more than 2012), 87 Dalits and 106 OBCs, besides earmarking 113 seats for upper castes — Brahmins 66, Kshatriyas 36 and others 11.

Since Muslims account for nearly 20 per cent of the voters in Uttar Pradesh, party supremo Mayawati decided to field more candidates belonging to that community, playing her Dalit-Muslim consolidation card to come back to power.

Muslims, who had by and large supported the SP in the 2012 elections, are in a quandary in view of the factional fight between Chief Minister Akhilesh Yadav and his father Mulayam Singh Yadav.

With a weak Samajwadi Party, Muslims will look for alternatives and Ms. Mayawati wants to be at the right place at the right time, say analysts. If she manages to direct the entire Muslim vote her way, she could pose a tough challenge to the BJP and the SP, they believe.

Before releasing the fourth list of candidates, Ms. Mayawati presided over a meeting of party office-bearers, leaders, legislators, MPs and party candidates where she told them to fan out in their respective constituencies and work for the BSP’s victory.

She also asked her party leaders to expose the SP government on lawlessness and the Centre on demonetisation.

She took pot shots at the Yadav family spat saying voters should not spoil their ballots by backing the SP as doing this would indirectly benefit the BJP in the polls.

Uttar Pradesh goes to polls in seven phases between February 11 and March 8.

In the first list of 100 candidates released by Ms. Mayawati on Thursday for the communally sensitive western U.P., 36 tickets went to Muslims and 27 to the upper castes including 17 to Brahmins and eight to the Thakurs.

In 2012, she had fielded 31 Muslims in western UP, five less than this time.

Twenty seats were given to OBCs, which have significant strength in the region which goes to polls in the first two phases on February 11 and 15.

OBCs constitute 45 per cent of U.P.’s total population.

Ms. Mayawati replaced 10 sitting MLAs in the region. But, she retained nine candidates who lost in 2012 by a narrow margin.

After giving maximum tickets to Muslims in the first list, Ms. Mayawati gave 27 seats to Dalits in the second list of 100 more candidates released on Friday.

In the second list, covering major portions of Rohilkhand and central U.P., the number of Muslim nominees came down to 23 compared to 36 in the first list.

She also appeared to strike a balance with the upper castes giving Brahmins 14 seats and Thakurs 8. OBCs got 24 seats.

Areas covered in the second list include some SP strongholds like Kannauj, Etawah and Mainpuri, besides Lucknow and Kanpur.

Muslims once again got the lion’s share in the third list of another 100 aspirants released by the BSP on Saturday when 27 candidates belonging to that community were given tickets — seven more than what the the party had fielded in 2012.

Ms. Mayawati retained Pooja Pal — wife of former BSP MLAs Raju Pal, allegedly murdered by the brother of mafia-turned-politician Atiq Ahmed in 2006 — as BSP candidate from Allahabad.

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