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Much has been said and written about the Congress’ efforts to cobble an anti-BJP coalition for the upcoming parliamentary elections, but the BJP, despite its noises about weak and corrupt coalition governments, is not hunting alone either. After firming up an alliance in Bihar, it has recently sealed deals in Maharashtra and Tamil Nadu and is now expected to turn its attention to the key battleground state of Uttar Pradesh.
The alliance-making efforts of the two national parties are in acknowledgment of a common reality:
There are 14 large states (states with 10 or more parliamentary seats), together accounting for 411 parliamentary seats (about three-fourths of the total), where such parties have serious traction.
To determine which national party holds the edge insofar as alliance-making is concerned, it is useful to look at these 14 states in four blocs.
These are Assam, Haryana, Jharkhand, Karnataka and Maharashtra, which together account for 114 parliamentary seats.
Neither the BJP nor the Congress seems keen on making an effort with the imploding INLD in Haryana, which is an advantage for the Congress. The INC has sealed or is close to sealing alliances in Jharkhand, Karnataka and Maharashtra and has greater chances of drawing the AUDF into its fold if the post-poll scenario requires.
These are Andhra Pradesh and Tamil Nadu, which together account for 68 parliamentary seats.
Andhra Pradesh may well see both national parties pressing forth alone but at least one of the two top contenders’ doors appear shut to the BJP when it comes to a post-poll alliance.
These are Kerala, Punjab and Telengana, which together account for 46 parliamentary seats. In these states, the BJP’s best hopes are of a post-poll understanding with the TRS.
These are Bihar, Odisha, Uttar Pradesh and West Bengal, which together account for 183 parliamentary seats. In alliance terms, the BJP is not in the best place when it comes to these states. Neither is the Congress but then it did not start with grand ambitions from these states.
In Bihar, the BJP has conceded much to Nitish Kumar and Ram Vilas Paswan, flip-floppers both, and the vote transfer from Nitish’s JD-U to it may not be as seamless as it would seem.
And, in Uttar Pradesh, taking on the formidable BSP-SP-RLD combine will not be easy for the BJP – even if the SBSP is placated, the one faction of the Apna Dal that is with it proves the right horse to back, and a host of election-eve sprouting parties are yoked in either as allies or ‘vote katuas’.
That said, if there is one state where the Congress’ alliance strategy can be faulted, it is Uttar Pradesh.
That looks tough at the moment. There is, of course, the tantalising prospect of Priyanka actually negotiating a more respectable space for the Congress in the BSP-SP-RLD coalition. Now, that would be a true political masterstroke!
(Manish Dubey is a policy analyst and crime fiction writer, and can be reached on Twitter at@ManishDubey1972. This is an opinion piece and the views expressed above are the author’s own. The Quint neither endorses nor is responsible for the same.)
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Published: 20 Feb 2019,06:49 PM IST