Jolt to Mayawati as Bhim Army supports Congress

IANS  |  Lucknow 

In an unexpected move, the has announced its support to the that is bound to upset the Bahujan Samaj Party's apple cart in western where eight constituencies go to polls on Thursday in the first phase.

Besides Saharanpur, there is also Kairana, Muzaffarnagar, Bijnor, Meerut, Baghpat, Ghaziabad and that will vote on April 11.

It was in Saharanpur on Sunday that the BSP had appealed to Muslims to vote en masse for the alliance and not to split their votes by opting for

Interestingly, in her rally, a large participation of the volunteers who carried placards with photographs of Chandra Shekhar, was seen and this is said to have upset the BSP who later blasted her party workers.

This development is particularly disturbing for Mayawati since the Bhim Army also belongs to the Jatav sub caste among Dalits.

Mayawati, till now, has enjoyed complete supremacy over this caste to which she belongs. has proudly put up a board saying "The Great Chamar" outside his village Dhadkauli in Saharanpur.

"The Bhim Army has played a very clever game. kept praising the BSP but Mayawati kept snubbing him and dubbing him a BJP agent.

"He has now played the masterstroke by announcing support to the Congress at a time when there is no time left for any damage control. The BSP will now realise the strength of the Bhim Army," said Kumar Gautam, a Bhim Army supporter.

The Congress had sensed the growing popularity of the Bhim Army and had been quietly cultivating Chandra Shekhar.

Imran Masood, the Congress candidate in Saharanpur, had been regularly visiting Chandra Shekhar while he was in jail for over 15 months.

More recently, when Chandra Shekhar was hospitalised, Congress for eastern Priyanka Gandhi Vadra and Pradesh Congress had visited him in hospital.

That the base has been steadily eroding after 2007 is evident from the fact that they have been steadily losing on reserved seats.

In the 2014 Lok Sabha elections, the BSP failed to win even a single seat. In the 2017 Assembly polls, it was the BJP that won on 76 out of 86 seats.

The share has also gone down from 30.43 per cent in 2007. In the 2009 Lok Sabha polls, the share came down to 27.4 per cent.

In 2012 Assembly polls, the percentage was 25.9 which came down to 20 per cent in the 2014 Lok Sabha elections. The party vote share marginally improved in the 2017 assembly elections with 22.3 per cent.

--IANS

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First Published: Wed, April 10 2019. 15:44 IST