The party is over for Mayawati in Uttar Pradesh

Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP), a Dalit-centric party that had a Brahmin as its most visible face in the 2022 assembly elections in Uttar Pradesh, has come up with its worst ever performance and not quite unexpectedly either.

The party is over for Mayawati in Uttar Pradesh
Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) Chief Mayawati. Source: IANS

Lucknow, March 10 (IANS) Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP), a Dalit-centric party that had a Brahmin as its most visible face in the 2022 assembly elections in Uttar Pradesh, has come up with its worst ever performance and not quite unexpectedly either.

With Mayawati making a very restricted appearance in the election campaign, it was left to BSP MP Satish Chandra Mishra, a Brahmin, to carry the campaign on his shoulders.

Kanshi Ram, who had founded the BSP in 1984, had formed it to represent Bahujan -- referring to Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes, and Other Backward Classes (OBC), along with religious minorities.

After 2012, Mayawati gradually promoted Mishra as the new face of the party and expelled or marginalized all Dalit leaders in the party.

The BSP now has no second rung leadership and even Jatavs, who had stood behind Mayawati during all her politically turbulent years, now seem to have deserted her.

Jatavs, the sub-caste to which Mayawati belongs, hold a 14 per cent share in the scheduled caste category. The BSP, till now, has managed to secure only 12.7 per cent votes which clearly shows that even Jatavs have moved away from the BSP.

This implies that the party has lost nearly 10 per cent of its vote share. In 2017, the BSP had got 22.2 per cent votes and 19 seats. The party, as of now, is leading only on two seats.

A former BSP MLA said, "The party is on its way to complete disintegration. The signals were clear when the party moved away from Kanshi Ram's ideology and began promoting Brahmin leaders - the same community that Kanshi Ram had warned us against. Mayawati has ow started promoting her family in politics and this also goes against Kanshi Ram's ideology. This is probably the BSP's last election. The elephant has outlived its utility."

Political pandits, meanwhile, say that the BSP's conflicting stand during the campaign has almost eradicated it from the political centre stage in Uttar Pradesh.

"She repeatedly issued statements that seemed supportive of the BJP and Amit Shah reciprocated when he testified BSP's relevance in UP politics. Naturally, the anti-BJP vote moved away from BSP because they sensed a post poll alliance with the BJP. Moreover, the absence of Dalit leadership in the party made the Dalits search for greener pastures. Some went with BJP and some with SP," said senior political analyst Prof RK Dixit.

Incidentally, most of the former BSP leaders have contested these elections on a SP ticket and with them, they have taken their own supporters.

The BSP will now have negligible presence in the state assembly and will be in no position to support or oppose the ruling BJP.

Mayawati has already burnt bridges with the Congress and Samajwadi Party, with whom she had allied in 2019, and for the time being at least, the party is almost over for Mayawati.

Sources within the party, meanwhile, claim that the party president is no longer interested in electoral politics and is eyeing the post of President of India.