'Hindu caste coalition helped BJP more than Muslim division in UP'

IANS  |  New Delhi 

The BJP's success in consolidating Hindu votes of various castes has rendered any division of Muslim votes redundant and helped Prime Minister Modi lead it to an unprecedented landslide victory in Uttar Pradesh, according to some Muslim leaders.

In Uttar Pradesh, the won 312 seats, including some of the Muslim-dominated seats such as Deoband, Chandpur, Moradabad Nagar, Noorpur, Naanpara and Nakur where analysts feel that Muslim votes got divided between Muslim candidates of the Samajwadi Party and the Bahujan Samaj Party.

Muslim candidates, however, managed to win seats like Meerut, Kairana, Najibabad, Moradabad Rural, Sambhal, Rampur and Suar-Tanda.

A number of Muslim leaders IANS spoke with conceded that a few seats did fall into the lap because of the division of Muslim votes. But given the scale of victory the got, it would not have mattered much had Muslims rallied behind any single party.

Kamal Farooqui, a former member of Samajwadi Party, said the "division of the Muslim votes per se" is somewhat an "abstract concept".

"Contrary to general perception, Muslims do not vote en masse for any party. The projects Muslims as a monolith to consolidate the Hindu votes. The fact is Muslims vote just like normal voters on issues which concern them," Farooqui told IANS.

"It is simply not possible that all the Muslims in vote for any one party. Muslim votes do matter... but they seldom go to a single candidate en masse in any constituency."

Syed Qasim Rasool Ilyas, National President of Welfare Party of India, said the BJP's strategy had "successfully rendered the Muslim factor (in elections) ineffective".

Ilyas said the "succeeded in getting votes of Hindu backward castes minus Yadavs and minus Jatavs.

"This new type of social engineering is being seen after the emergence of Modi and (President) Amit Shah on the scene," he said.

Former Rajya Sabha member Mohammed Adeeb said Modi and Shah were selling the promise of Hindu rashtra under the garb of 'achhe din' which actually helps the turn Hindu votes into a single more effective whole.

"Although the Modi government does not have any visible achievement in its last three years, still people voted for Modi.

"In Modi, they see this hope of Hindu rashtra which he is propagating as the 'achche din'," Adeeb said.

Agreed Navaid Hamid, Chairman, All India Muslim Majlis-e-Mushawarat, an umbrella body of several Muslim organisations. "We are moving towards a majoritarian democracy where nationalism is blended with Hindutva," Hamid said.

(Asim Khan can be contacted on mohd.a@ians.in <mailto:mohd.a@ians.in>)

--IANS

mak/sar/dg

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

'Hindu caste coalition helped BJP more than Muslim division in UP'

The BJP's success in consolidating Hindu votes of various castes has rendered any division of Muslim votes redundant and helped Prime Minister Narendra Modi lead it to an unprecedented landslide victory in Uttar Pradesh, according to some Muslim leaders.

The BJP's success in consolidating Hindu votes of various castes has rendered any division of Muslim votes redundant and helped Prime Minister Modi lead it to an unprecedented landslide victory in Uttar Pradesh, according to some Muslim leaders.

In Uttar Pradesh, the won 312 seats, including some of the Muslim-dominated seats such as Deoband, Chandpur, Moradabad Nagar, Noorpur, Naanpara and Nakur where analysts feel that Muslim votes got divided between Muslim candidates of the Samajwadi Party and the Bahujan Samaj Party.

Muslim candidates, however, managed to win seats like Meerut, Kairana, Najibabad, Moradabad Rural, Sambhal, Rampur and Suar-Tanda.

A number of Muslim leaders IANS spoke with conceded that a few seats did fall into the lap because of the division of Muslim votes. But given the scale of victory the got, it would not have mattered much had Muslims rallied behind any single party.

Kamal Farooqui, a former member of Samajwadi Party, said the "division of the Muslim votes per se" is somewhat an "abstract concept".

"Contrary to general perception, Muslims do not vote en masse for any party. The projects Muslims as a monolith to consolidate the Hindu votes. The fact is Muslims vote just like normal voters on issues which concern them," Farooqui told IANS.

"It is simply not possible that all the Muslims in vote for any one party. Muslim votes do matter... but they seldom go to a single candidate en masse in any constituency."

Syed Qasim Rasool Ilyas, National President of Welfare Party of India, said the BJP's strategy had "successfully rendered the Muslim factor (in elections) ineffective".

Ilyas said the "succeeded in getting votes of Hindu backward castes minus Yadavs and minus Jatavs.

"This new type of social engineering is being seen after the emergence of Modi and (President) Amit Shah on the scene," he said.

Former Rajya Sabha member Mohammed Adeeb said Modi and Shah were selling the promise of Hindu rashtra under the garb of 'achhe din' which actually helps the turn Hindu votes into a single more effective whole.

"Although the Modi government does not have any visible achievement in its last three years, still people voted for Modi.

"In Modi, they see this hope of Hindu rashtra which he is propagating as the 'achche din'," Adeeb said.

Agreed Navaid Hamid, Chairman, All India Muslim Majlis-e-Mushawarat, an umbrella body of several Muslim organisations. "We are moving towards a majoritarian democracy where nationalism is blended with Hindutva," Hamid said.

(Asim Khan can be contacted on mohd.a@ians.in <mailto:mohd.a@ians.in>)

--IANS

mak/sar/dg

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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