Literature
Maya back to drawing board, stitches up strategy for 2017 (News Analysis)
By
Mohit DubeyLucknow, June 17
Boxed into a political corner
by successive electoral defeats, Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) chief
Mayawati is back to the drawing board, plotting her next political move
in Uttar Pradesh, where her writ once was the final word.
The
shocking defeat by arch rival Samajwadi Party (SP) in the 2012 assembly
elections followed by the blankout in the 2014 general elections have
forced the Dalit leader to "realign herself to the changed realities in
the state", a close aide said, adding that 'behen ji' was now burning
the proverbial midnight oil to stage a comeback.
With the state
elections just a year and a half away, the four-time Uttar Pradesh chief
minister is focussing on the state to win it back and the frequency of
meetings with party cadres and senior leaders has gone up in the past
few months.
Assisted by the likes of Brijesh Pathak, Satish
Chandra Mishra, Ram Achal Rajbhar, Naseemuddin Siddiqui and Swamy Prasad
Maurya, Mayawati is learnt to be "carefully pouring through the caste
matrix" of the state and also trying to assess why she faced a rout at
the hustings in the past few years.
"Our defeat in 2012 was
apparent much before we went to the polls but the duck the party drew in
2014 jolted us into some serious introspection," said a senior leader,
who is part of the second-rung leadership Mayawati falls back on from
time to time.
She has held more than three dozen review meetings
since the humiliating defeat at the hands of the BJP in the Lok Sabha
elections where her "captive Dalit vote bank" was swayed away by the
"tsunami of Narendra Modi".
A senior Rajya Sabha party MP said
that while the BSP chief had "gone into a dictatorial mode" during her
last stint as the UP chief minister, Mayawati now was more "approachable
and responsive".
A Muslim BSP leader who unsuccessfully
contested the last state assembly polls told IANS that after the 2014
rout, the leader had shown traits of a loser which now were diminishing
by every passing day.
"She exudes confidence now, she listens to us, has the ear to the ground and is all geared up for 2017," said a close aide.
She
has already asked senior party leaders to ensure that the party
organizational structure, largely defunct after a series of electoral
reverses, is oiled and functional by June 30.
At a meeting of
zonal coordinators and office bearers on Monday, she is reported to have
assigned "tough deliverables and strict timelines" to party leaders.
"We saw the combative behenji once again," said a BSP leader from Kanpur after attending the meeting.
Mayawati
has now asked party leaders to focus on micro-level booth management,
something which the BJP did well in 2014 leading to its landslide
victory in UP. Booth and sector committees were being formed and the
party has asked for the cadres to be informed of "the injustice meted
out to them under the Akhilesh Yadav regime".
As second part of
her strategy she has also asked party leaders to take on the BJP, which
is a prickly issue for her, largely because her Dalit vote bank drifted
to Modi.
But all doesn't seem to be going her way.
In the past few months, Chief Minister Akhilesh Yadav has successfully arrested the downslide of his party.
Charges
of corruption and compromising on the party ideology as espoused by BSP
founder and her mentor Kanshi Ram, desertion by her core team and a
hostile state government may well be stumbling blocks in Mayawati's
scheme of things for future.
(Mohit Dubey can be contacted at [email protected])