RLD bets on corner meetings in Kairana

Hands-on campaign is a winning one: Jayant Chaudhary

May 25, 2018 11:24 pm | Updated 11:24 pm IST - NEW DELHI

Rashtriya Lok Dal leader Jayant Chaudhary.

Rashtriya Lok Dal leader Jayant Chaudhary.

The crucial Lok Sabha bypoll in Kairana in western Uttar Pradesh is expected to settle many things regarding a possible opposition unity alliance for the 2019 general election.

Rashtriya Lok Dal leader Jayant Chaudhary has been campaigning extensively for his party’s candidate, Tabassum Hassan, whose candidature has been supported by the Samajwadi Party and the Bahujan Samaj Party, aggressively making the point that the poll is about livelihood issues rather than communal flashpoints.

Ear to the ground

“We have been doing a micro campaign for the last few weeks, and we have not held a single large meeting. Our feedback is that this election is about ganna (sugarcane) rather than Jinnah (referring to the controversy over a picture of Pakistan’s founder being hung in Aligarh Muslim University),” he told The Hindu in an exclusive interview.

Ms. Hassan has been pitted against Mriganka Singh of the BJP who is also the daughter of the late MP from Kairana, Hukum Singh, whose death necessitated the bypoll.

“I have not used a single bus to cart crowds to big meetings. We have been deliberately going to villages and holding corner meetings for a more hands-on campaign. What we have seen gives me confidence that we will win. In fact the issues we have flagged have forced Yogi Adityanath to talk about sugarcane dues and employment, subjects that his government is defensive on, rather than communal subjects,” he said.

Riots and after

On being asked about the fracture of his party’s vote bank in the aftermath of the Muzaffarnagar riots in 2013, Mr. Chaudhary said that his party had been doing bhaichara (amity) meetings in small panchayats across western Uttar Pradesh for more than a year. “I don’t feel brushing things under the carpet works, we found that people are ready for a rapprochement, and agrarian distress is spurring them back to the old organic social equations that were there before. We also learned that before the big riots in 2013, there were a series of small incidents that led to the big one, and that we need to nip these in the bud,” he said.

He remarked that he had been questioned a lot on why the party had fielded Ms. Hassan, a Muslim, where a Jat candidate may have sufficed to attract back the vote of the community in the face of a unified Hindu vote that the BJP had been able to garner. “I want to break the dangerous idea that no political party in this country is interested in giving representation to Muslims. This is a seat with a sizeable population of Muslims, and we have given the seat to a Muslim,” he said.

The poll in Kairana is scheduled for May 28 and counting for May 31.

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