Tag: obc

  • BJP’s OBC Strategy Reshapes UP Politics

    BJP’s OBC Strategy Reshapes UP Politics

    The BJP changed the game by focussing on Kurmis — the next largest group within the OBCs…reports Asian Lite News

    With 200-odd groups, the OBC are emerging as an important factor in Uttar Pradesh in the upcoming Lok Sabha elections.

    Despite the BJP making inroads among OBC voters and its non-dominant castes, the OBCs remain the core support base of many regional parties.

    The OBCs in Uttar Pradesh are estimated to be over 50 per cent of the state’s population, according to data from the Hukum Singh committee set up in 2001.

    Yadavs are the largest OBC caste with a 19.40 per cent share. They are the most powerful constituent of the OBC group and had, till now, played a dominant role in shaping politics in Uttar Pradesh but after 2014, other groups started emerging on the political horizon.

    The BJP changed the game by focussing on Kurmis — the next largest group within the OBCs.

    Apna Dal (S), a Kurmi-centric party, joined the NDA in 2014 and has been an important and loyal BJP ally ever since.

    It is important to note that amongst the OBCs, the non-dominant OBCs combined are numerically larger compared to the combined total of various castes amongst the dominant OBCs.

    This has resulted in BJP focusing more on mobilising the non-dominant OBC castes compared to the dominant OBCs, who anyway are the core supporters of different regional parties in different states.

    The Rajbhars and the riverine communities are part of this and the BJP has Suheldev Bhartiya Samaj Party (SBSP) and Nishad Party representing these two vote banks in UP.

    The BJP, according to surveys conducted by Lokniti-CSDS, has been able to make inroads amongst the voters belonging to the OBC castes — more amongst the non-dominant OBC castes compared to the dominant OBC.

    “Our presence among OBCs has increased in the past decade and Prime Minister Narendra Modi has made several announcements for supporting those who belong to the non-dominant OBC castes. He launched a scheme with an initial fund of Rs 13,000 crore to Rs 15,000 crore for workers engaged in traditional trade, those who work with tools, use their hands, and are primarily from the OBC section,” said a BJP party functionary.

    During the 2014 Lok Sabha elections, 30 per cent of dominant OBCs voted for the BJP while amongst the non-dominant OBC voters, it got 43 per cent votes.

    The BJP’s support amongst the OBC voters increased further during the 2019 Lok Sabha elections.

    Amongst the dominant OBC voters, 40 per cent voted for the BJP while amongst the non-dominant OBCs it got 48 per cent votes.

    The BJP mobilised the non-dominant OBC castes voters by building a narrative of them being denied their share in social, economic and political power, which have been cornered by the dominant OBC castes.

    The evidence suggests that BJP’s narrative seems to have paid dividends and the BJP now enjoys the support of most of the non-dominant OBC groups.

    On the other hand, the Samajwadi Party, which has been banking mainly on the Yadav vote bank, has failed to clobber the support of non-Yadav OBC groups.

    “The party has failed to make a conscious effort to woo non-Yadav communities. It has been a major cause of failure for the Samajwadi Party in the last decade. Akhilesh Yadav, despite representing the new generation in politics, has failed to see beyond the Yadavs,” admitted a senior non-Yadav leader in the SP.

    He further said that the PDA (Pichhda-Dalit-Alpsankhayak) formula has come rather late in the day and is unlikely to benefit the party in the Lok Sabha elections.

    “The problem with the party leadership is that it is unable to strike a balance among major caste groups. PDA was abandoned in the selection of Rajya Sabha candidates and this led to a revolt in the ranks,” the leader added.

    The Congress, meanwhile, is also reaching out for OBCs but the party lacks a well-defined strategy on the issue.

    The party had appointed Ajay Kumar Lallu, an OBC, as UPCC Chief in 2019 but he failed to rope in OBC voters. He was succeeded by Brijlal Khabri, a Dalit, but he too failed to benefit the party.

    The Congress announced its 130-member state committee, giving major representation to OBCs with 44 members.

    Over the years, Congress has lost support both amongst the dominant and non-dominant OBC castes.

    The Bahujan Samaj Party, meanwhile, has failed to make inroads in the OBC vote bank and most of its OBC leaders in UP have either walked out of the party or have been expelled.

    The BSP, besides issuing statements, has not made any visible efforts to reach out to non-dominant OBCs, ahead of the upcoming elections.

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  • BJP Counters Caste Census Push with OBC Outreach

    BJP Counters Caste Census Push with OBC Outreach

    Sources said suggestions were taken from the leaders who attended the meeting….reports Asian Lite News

    With opposition parties laying thrust on caste census and trying to make it a big poll issue, the BJP is devising a strategy to counter their narrative with a meeting held at the party headquarters here deciding to plan a big reach out to the OBC community, sources said.

    They said that BJP is “serious” about countering the opposition narrative. Bihar has held a caste survey and Congress has promised to hold caste census in various election-going states. Opposition parties are also likely to rake up the issue ahead of Lok Sabha polls next year.

    “The BJP is planning a big programme to reach out to the OBC community. Party leaders will go to the members of the OBC community to tell them about the initiatives of the BJP-led government as also of the party for OBCs,” a party leader said.

    Sources said suggestions were taken from the leaders who attended the meeting.

    They said a core committee will be formed to decide future strategy on the issue.

    Sources said the meeting also discussed the issue of the Maratha reservation in Maharashtra.

    Union Home Minister Amit Shah, BJP chief JP Nadda and party leaders BL Santosh and Vinod Tawde were among those present in the meeting.

    Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath, Deputy Chief Minister Keshav Prasad Maurya, Uttar Pradesh BJP chief Bhupendra Chaudhary and party leaders BL Verma, Niranjan Jyoti, Sangam Lal Gupta and Surendra Nagar also joined the meeting.

    Maharashtra Deputy Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis and party leader Chandrashekhar Bawankule attended the meeting. BJP’s OBC Morcha chief K Laxman was present.

    Om Prakash Dhankar from Haryana and party leaders Vijay Sinha, Samrat Choudhary and Sushil Modi from Bihar were also present.

    Congress leader Rahul Gandhi has been attacking the BJP over the “lack of adequate representation of OBCs” in secretary-level posts at the Centre.

    BJP leaders have said they have the highest representation of OBCs among various national parties. (ANI)

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  • Top OBC leaders bite dust

    Top OBC leaders bite dust

    Swami Prasad Maurya was made to bite dust in his Fazilnagar seat where he was defeated, ironically, by the BJP…reports Asian Lite News

    The Uttar Pradesh Assembly elections that concluded on Thursday, banked largely on the consolidation of OBC leaders in almost all the major political parties.

    However, the poll results have shown up shocking results as a number of prominent OBC leaders have lost their seats.

    The most shocking defeat is that of former BJP minister Swami Prasad Maurya, who led a revolt of sorts in the BJP in January and joined the Samajwadi Party.

    Swami Prasad Maurya was made to bite dust in his Fazilnagar seat where he was defeated, ironically, by the BJP.

    Dharam Singh Saini, another BJP minister who had followed Maurya, also lost his seat in Saharanpur.

    “The opposition tried to spread confusion among the backward castes, but it was futile and the community stood steadfast with BJP,” state BJP OBC Morcha chief Narendra Kashyap.

    The defeat of deputy Chief Minister Keshav Prasad Maurya is a shocker for the BJP which had projected him as the face of OBC in Uttar Pradesh.

    He had been vigorously campaigning for his party candidate, flitting from one constituency to another but lost his own Sirathu seat to Samajwadi Party’s Pallavi Patel.

    Senior Samajwadi Party (SP) leader and leader of opposition, Ram Govind Chaudhary, was also defeated in his Bansdih constituency.

    Ajay Kumar Lallu, UPCC president and the OBC face of the Congress suffered a humiliating defeat in his Tamkuhi Raj seat. He trailed at the third position in his constituency.

    Krishna Patel, president of the breakaway faction of Apna Dal who contested the Pratapgarh seat in alliance with SP, lost her seat even though her estranged daughter Anupriya Patel had withdrawn her candidate from the fray as a mark of respect to her mother.

    The OBCs had sided with the BJP in 2017 to emerge as an alternate pressure group to the socio-economically powerful Yadav community, which happens to be SP’s base. This triggered a realignment of castes and around 60 per cent OBCs voted in favour of the BJP in 2017.

    Akhilesh tried to shift this balance and wooed the non-Yadav OBC bloc aimed to recalibrate Uttar Pradesh politics.

    “SP sought a makeover from a party dominated by Yadavs, but it didn’t work before the BJP’s organisational machinery,” said a political analyst.

    Almost all parties had put OBC leaders at the helm of their campaigns and particularly in the last three phases to test their popularity.

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