Lucknow: In the past two decades, Samajwadi Party and Bahujan Samaj Party have failed to win 11 parliamentary seats of Uttar Pradesh, including state capital Lucknow, Varanasi, and Congress bastions of Amethi and Raebareilly.
Besides, the two parties could not win in Baghpat, Bareilly, Pilibhit, Kanpur, Mathura, Hathras and Kushinagar.
However, relying on caste arithmetic, SP and BSP in alliance with RJD is striving hard to get maximum number of seats in the state which sends 80 MPs.
After the alliance, both parties left Raebareilly and Amethi for UPA Chairperson Sonia Gandhi and Congress President Rahul Gandhi respectively, while on Baghpat and Mathura RLD is contesting and on the rest of the seven seats SP candidates are in fray.
The Lucknow seat on which the alliance is still indecisive and has not fielded its candidate yet, is BJP’s stronghold.
In 1998, 1999 and 2004 the seat was held by former prime minister late Atal Bihari Vajpayee while in 2009 and 2014, the BJP’s Lalji Tondon and Home minister Rajnath Singh had won the seat.
Similar is the scenario in Kanpur seat, which was held by Congress’ Sriprakash Jaiswal between 1999-2009 and BJP’s Murli Manohar Joshi in 2014.
Jaiswal is challenged by BJP candidate and state minister Satyadev Pachauri while SP has fielded Ram Kumar as its candidate this time.
Varanasi, presently held by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, was won by the BJP’s Murli Manohar Joshi in 2009 while in 2004 it was won by Rajesh Kumar Mishra of Congress and the BJP’s Shankar Prasad Jaiswal in 1999.
In Baghpat and Mathura too SP, BSP could not win but in alliance with the RJD, the result may differ this time.
In past two decades SP, BSP never able to win these 11 Lok Sabha seats of Uttar Pradesh:
RLD’s Jayant Chowdhury is in fray from Baghpat against BJP’s Satyapal Singh while in Mathura, RLD’s Kunwar Narendra Singh is challening BJP’s Hema Malini.
The same pattern is seen in Pilibhit which is held by BJP since 1999.
While Union minister Maneka Gandhi won the seat in 1999, 2004 and 2014, the seat was with her son Varun Gandhi in 2009, who is once again in fray and is challenged by SP’s Hemraj Verma this time.
In Bareilly seat also BJP’s candidate and Union Minister Santosh Gangwar is winning continuously since 1999 except in 2009 when he lost to Congress candidate Praveen Singh Aron.
Gangwar is once again in the fray and is being challenged by SP’s Bhagwat Sharan Gangwar, minister in previous Akhilesh Yadav government.
Hathras and Kushinagar were also not won by both the parties in the past two decades.
When asked why SP-BSP could not succeed in these constituencies in past two decades, SP leader and MLC Rajpal Kashyap said, “Nothing can be termed permanent in politics. Situations keep changing. In this LS polls, its the time of alliance and our candidates will win as the situation has changed”.
“This time people of the state want to change this ‘jumlebaz’ (gimmick) government at the Centre. Also, as the SP and BSP are contesting together there is no confusion in minds of the people and they will be voting for us to root out the BJP government,” Kashyap said.
In the 2014 Lok Sabha polls, the SP had won five seats, while the BSP failed to win any seat. In the 2017 assembly polls, SP and BSP got 22 per cent votes each.
“In the politically-crucial Uttar Pradesh, there are about 22 per cent Dalits, 45 per cent OBCs and 19 per cent Muslims, whose vote share will be decisive in the general elections this year,” political analyst JP Shukla said.
If both the parties continue to have a say in their traditional vote banks, the combine can create hurdles for the BJP in the LS polls, he added.