Regarding the session, he said since this would be the last one before the Lok Sabha polls, “effort will be on to ensure that all pending legislations for people's welfare are prioritized and passed”.
Indications on forging of such an alliance have come in from Bihar where Chief Minister and JD(U) leader Nitish Kumar has been saying there was no chance of either BJP or Congress- led alliances coming to power.
“Under such circumstances, formation of a grouping of anti-Congress and anti-BJP parties will be significant in the coming Lok Sabha elections,” he said. Similar statements have also been made by SP chief Mulayam Singh Yadav.
“What we have been saying all along is that people are looking for relief. They want relief from burdens that are being imposed on them. They are disgusted in the manner in which public resources are being looted; they are fed up with rampant corruption. They are looking for an alternative,” Yechury said.
The coming together of non-BJP, non-Congress parties were going to have “very good impact... This sort of coming together of various non-BJP, non-Congress political parties, which are mainly regional parties, but very powerful in their regions as they are heading the state governments there, is good.”