Samajwadi Party chief and former Uttar Pradesh chief minister Akhilesh Yadav has said that the Congress was kept out of the SP-BSP alliance in the state to correct “poll arithmetic” in order to defeat the BJP.
The SP chief said that he had “immense respect” for Congress President Rahul Gandhi and added that he would be happy if the next prime minister was from his home state.
Akhilesh Yadav, however, refused to directly answer a question on whether the SP was open to working with Congress after the polls.
“If you take out the number of seats in Uttar Pradesh, you will notice that the BJP government doesn’t have the majority. BJP keeps talking about social engineering. So, I also decided to correct my poll arithmetic and did it through this alliance,” Akhilesh told PTI during his visit to Kolkata for the January 19 united opposition rally.
He said that despite carrying out a lot of developmental works during his tenure as Uttar Pradesh chief minister, he lost the 2017 assembly elections as his poll arithmetic was not right.
“So, I decided to correct the arithmetic by taking along Bahujan Samaj Party and Rashtriya Lok Dal and left two seats for the Congress,” he said.
The Samajwadi Party and the Congress had joined hands in the 2017 assembly poll in UP but lost to the BJP.
“In order to correct the arithmetic of UP and defeat BJP it (SP-BSP alliance) has been done. Should we lose seats (to BJP) just to pacify others,” he questioned.
Left out of the SP-BSP pre-poll tie-up in Uttar Pradesh, the Congress has announced that it would go it alone in all the 80 Lok Sabha seats in the state for the upcoming general election.
Congress’ decision to contest in all the 80 seats came in the backdrop of SP and BSP announcing their alliance in Uttar Pradesh, sharing 38 seats each, and leaving two seats for the smaller parties, besides leaving Rae Bareli and Amethi to United Progressive Alliance (UPA) chairperson Sonia Gandhiand Congress chief Rahul Gandhi, respectively.
When asked whether keeping Congress out of the opposition alliance would dampen the prospects of opposition in the politically crucial state, Akhilesh said, “With this seat adjustment, we have further strengthened the opposition unity. We have kept two seats for Congress. Our relationship with Congress has always been good. The issue of relationship is different. The main issue is how to defeat BJP and I have worked towards that arithmetic”.
Akhilesh had earlier said that the Samajwadi Party’s alliance with BSP and the RLD was “final” and there would be no issues as regards seat-sharing in the Lok Sabha polls, while ruling out any understanding with the Congress.
“We have left two seats for them. Now, they (Congress) have decided to fight in 78 other seats. If they want to fight it is up to them. We have nothing to say about it,” he said.
When asked if the alliance would field candidates in the changed scenario as the Congress has decided to contest in all the 80 seats, he said SP-BSP will not do so in Rae Bareli and Amethi.
Akhilesh, however, maintained that keeping Congress out of alliance and giving them just two seats will not have any impact on the opposition vote share in the polls.
When asked to comment on Rahul Gandhi’s remarks that he has “tremendous respect” for the leaders of SP and BSP, Akhilesh said that he also has immense respect for Rahul Gandhi.
“Anybody from any part of the country can become the next prime minister. But it would be good if the next PM is from Uttar Pradesh because there is a notion that those who want to become PM fights from UP or increases its tally from this state,” he said.
Asked who is his first choice as PM - BSP chief Mayawati or Trinamool Congress supremo Mamata Banerjee - Akhilesh refused to give a direct reply and said efforts should be made to elect a new prime minister and some issues can be discussed after the polls.
Akhilesh, however, sounded confident that regional parties which have come together at the January 19 Brigade Parade Grounds rally here organized by the Trinamool Congress would stay together even after the polls.
(With PTI inputs)