Amar Singh meets Mulayam, looks to SP for RS entry

October 29, 2014 11:54 pm | Updated May 23, 2016 04:30 pm IST - New Delhi:

Amar Singh

Amar Singh

Samajwadi Party supremo Mulayam Singh Yadav was closeted for three hours at his residence here on Wednesday with his former lieutenant Amar Singh – who was forced to leave the party in 2010 – amid speculation that the Samajwadi Party may help him get a Rajya Sabha berth in the upcoming biennial polls for 10 seats to the Upper House.

Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Akhilesh Yadav, was present at the meeting. He later flew back to Lucknow.

In the wake of the last Assembly elections in Uttar Pradesh in 2012, the Samajwadi Party, that had only one of the 10 RS seats going to the polls, will increase its tally to six; the Bahujan Samaj Party’s share will shrink from six to two; the BJP will remain static at one.

The Congress and the Ajit Singh-led Rashtriya Lok Dal – both still partners in the United Progressive Alliance – together could get one Rajya Sabha seat.

But even as Mr. Mulayam Singh Yadav is keen to help Mr. Amar Singh get a berth in the Upper House, party sources said senior party colleagues, including cousin Ram Gopal Yadav, Mohammad Azam Khan and Reoti Raman Singh, are opposing the move. Indeed, former Prime Minister Chandrashekhar’s son, Neeraj Shekhar – a Rajput like Mr. Singh – is being seen as a worthier candidate. The Samajwadi Party may back him as an independent.

Mr. Amar Singh is an independent Rajya Sabha MP, whose tenure ends, like the others, on November 25.

Meanwhile, though talks are yet to be held, RLD chief Ajit Singh, who lost his Lok Sabha seat in the general elections earlier this year, is hoping to persuade the Congress to support his candidature.

But a senior Congress functionary said since the party’s numbers have been severely depleted in the Lok Sabha, it would like to win every possible seat in the Rajya Sabha. He added that though names of senior Congress leaders, who lost their seats in the recent Parliament elections, were in circulation for Rajya Sabha seats, the party is looking for new names: “It will be someone from the younger generation, someone, for instance, like MV Rajeev Gowda, who became a Rajya Sabha MP in July this year from Karnataka,” he said.

But clearly, if the Congress, which has 28 MLAs, does not oblige Mr. Ajit Singh, the RLD might quit the UPA and form a partnership with the Samajwadi Party, that is now looking to re-build its strength after the beating it took in the Lok Sabha polls, and consolidate the gains it made in the recent Assembly by-polls.

A Samajwadi Party-RLD partnership in western UP might help both parties regain their strength in the region. For the Samajwadi Party, party sources said, it is a gamble worth taking, especially as it has six Rajya Sabha seats to play with.

Other likely Samajwadi Party Rajya Sabha candidates include Mr. Ramgopal Yadav, whose former State Minister Ashok Bajpai, ex-Lok Sabha MP Ravi Prakash Verma and, possibly, one Muslim leader.

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