Sign in

Maya cautions BSP cadres against leaders who sell out for personal gain

BSP chief asks party leaders and workers to start holding small meetings of the party cadres across Uttar Pradesh

Published on: Jun 13, 2021, 01:23:32 IST
By , LUCKNOW 
Share
Share via
  • facebook
  • twitter
  • linkedin
  • whatsapp
Copy link
  • copy link

Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) chief Mayawati, who has expelled 11 party MLAs and three Uttar Pradesh party chiefs in the past three years and seen several of her key aides’ defecting either to the BJP or the SP, has hit out at party deserters who get ‘sold out’ for individual gains.

Mayawati has asked the BSP cadres to connect with the public . (Deepak Gupta/HT FIle Photo)
Mayawati has asked the BSP cadres to connect with the public . (Deepak Gupta/HT FIle Photo)

After a meeting at the party office in Lucknow on Saturday called to expand the party’s base ahead of 2022 Uttar Pradesh polls, she urged the party leaders and workers to start holding small meetings of the party cadres across the state.

These cadres, she said, would connect with the masses and remind them of the various initiatives and works undertaken by the BSP leadership when the party was in power in the state. “We need to continue with such small cadre meetings,” said the four-time former UP chief minister.

At the meeting, she cautioned cadres against those party leaders who were deserting the party for individual gains. “We have to realign ourselves and work with missionary zeal to ensure a BSP government in the state that works for the welfare of all. The party people must trust cadre more than such leaders who take the name of Baba Saheb Bhimrao Ambedkar and Kanshi Ram ji but who get sold out for individual gains,” Mayawati said at the meeting.

The BSP had 18 MLAs in the state’s legislative assembly but after rebellion of 9 lawmakers, including Ramvir Upadhyaya, Anil Singh, Aslam Raini, Aslam Ali, Mujtaba Siddiqui, Hakim Lal Bind, Hargovind Bhargava, Sushma Patel, Vandana Singh as well as recent expulsion of Lalji Verma and Ramachal Rajbhar, the party’s effective strength has since been reduced to seven MLAs.

In fact, as she spoke, one of her suspended party MLAs Ramvir Upadhyaya, whose son Chiragvir has already joined the BJP, was seen with BJP leaders in Mathura. Upadhyaya was among BSP’s key Brahmin leaders who served as power minister in the Maya government in 2007.

“We are in an election year now so the effective current strength of parties in assembly is meaningless. The model code would come into force in another seven to eight months’ time. Defections are common in an election year but those who have left BSP for other parties have soon realised that they have been used,” a BSP leader said.

At the meeting Mayawati, party leaders said, cautioned the cadres against leaders who ‘bik jaate hain’ (get sold out). “Such people don’t hesitate about harming the party movement and get sold out though in the end these people end up harming themselves the most which they realise later. We need to stay wary of such people,” she said.

Mayawati followed the ‘bik jaate hain’ phrase by reminding the cadre that BSP was a ‘movement-based’ party which unlike other political parties, didn’t rely on donations from corporate world. Instead, it relied on cadres for support, a BSP leader said.

This was the first time Mayawati spoke after expelling two of her trusted MLAs in the party— veteran Lalji Verma and former UP BSP chief Ramachal Rajbhar. Both the leaders expelled on the charges of anti-party activities during the recently concluded panchayat elections had denied that they were in touch with either the BJP or SP and appealed to Mayawati to give them a hearing.

The BSP chief, however, hasn’t responded to their appeals so far. Party cadres felt Mayawati’s address to the cadres to be cautious about ‘opportunists’ was in a way an attempt to pre-empt more desertions from the party.

  • Manish Chandra Pandey
    ABOUT THE AUTHOR
    Manish Chandra Pandey

    Manish Chandra Pandey is a Lucknow-based Senior Assistant Editor with Hindustan Times’ political bureau in Lucknow, Uttar Pradesh. Along with political reporting, he loves to write offbeat/human interest stories that people connect with. Manish also covers departments. He feels he has a lot to learn not just from veterans, but also from newcomers who make him realise that there is so much to unlearn.Read More