Will the BJP-BSP alliance in UP last?
George Iype in New Delhi
The unusual power-sharing pact hammered out by the Bharatiya Janata
Party and Bahujan Samaj Party in Uttar Pradesh is unlikely to
last long, given the mercurial nature of BSP supremo Kanshi Ram
and the former's inability to shake off its upper caste tag.
The extraordinary experiment will nevertheless benefit the BJP
to learn the fine art of sharing power in the era of coalition
politics and make its chances of stepping towards national power
brighter.
Top BJP leaders contend that the logic that compelled the party
to join hands with Kanshi Ram is its belief that enhancing its UP
vote bank is vital to grab power at the Centre in the next general
election. The party expects the United Front government headed
by Prime Minister H D Deve Gowda to fall within six months.
"We have the people's mandate to rule UP -- the BJP emerged
the single largest party in the last assembly election. Therefore,
the BJP-BSP alliance is holistic," BJP vice-president Sikander
Bakht said.
The experiment in UP, he told Rediff On The NeT is ''a
leap forward'' for the BJP to move realistically towards national
power. ''But our utmost priority in UP is the restoration of the
rule of law as corruption and criminality are the order of the
day under Governor Romesh Bhandari," Bakht added.
But political observers do not foresee longevity in a coalition
government in which the chief ministership is rotated every six
months between the political partners.
They cite three reasons that could make the BJP
and BSP part ways within six months.
Firstly, it is unlikely that Mayawati and her mentor Kanshi Ram
will concede the chief ministership
to the BJP's Kalyan Singh after six months.
Secondly, the experiment will collapse if the Vishwa Hindu Parishad
goes ahead with its campaign
to liberate the controversial Kashi and Mathura temples.
Thirdly, it is unlikely that the Mayawati-Kalyan Singh combine
will be in a position to fight the corruption, criminalisation
and atrocities against the weaker sections in UP with single-minded
devotion.
Many, however, believe the power-sharing arrangement in UP will be 'Advantage
BJP' as the party could direct its efforts
to attract not only the BSP's votebank -- the dalits and weaker sections
-- but of the Janata Dal and Samajwadi Party as well.
A senior BJP leader said that the party's strategy is to seize
the BSP's social justice plank. ''The alliance will help us
erase the BJP's public image of being a brahmnical party,"
he added.
But the BJP leadership expects much more than merely shaking off
its upper caste tag under the new arrangement. The party believes
that in UP and Madhya Pradesh, both states where the Congress is
in shambles, a BJP-BSP alliance has the potential
to win the bulk of the parliamentary seats.
The BJP is also sufficiently encouraged by the successful coalition experiments in
Punjab with the Akali Dal and in Maharashtra with the Shiv Sena to
give up its internal hostility to such power-sharing arrangements.
As for Kanshi Ram, the BSP's second innings in power in UP is
a chance to file all the cases against Samajwadi Party chief
Mulayam Singh Yadav and members of his party.
Many believe that Kanshi Ram will change sides after Mayawati's
six month stint in office ends.
On June 21, 1996, the BSP supremo had announced his alliance with
the Congress at a joint press conference along with then Congress
chief P V Narasimha Rao -- almost like the way he did on Wednesday.
But the alliance received a jolt when the Congress was unable
to put enough pressure on the United Front government to support
a Mayawati-led government in UP. Later the two parties failed
to come together to fight the Punjab assembly election.
Days before he clinched a deal with the Congress last year, Kanshi
Ram had told Rediff On The NeT that Mulayam Singh Yadav was a
greater evil than the BJP. "The BJP is like a cobra," he said. "If you are
alert, you can escape its poison. But Mulayam is like a snake
in the grass. He can bite you anytime."
Kanshi Ram has now chosen to align with the BJP, but are Mayawati
and he alert enough to escape the "cobra"?
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