Has the BSP voter gone to BJP in UP Elections 2022?
Almost all the exit polls have given a thumping majority to the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) in Uttar Pradesh (UP), and a setback for the Samajwadi Party (SP) and Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP). The India Today-My Axis India Exit Poll predicts 288-326 seats for the BJP, 71-101 seats for the SP, 3-9 seats for the BSP, and 1-3 seats for the Congress.
What’s surprising is the fact that BSP, which had a vote share of 22.04% in 2017, seems to have plummeted to 12% in 2022.
Mayawati, who formed the government in UP in 2007 winning 206 seats, may be down to single digit seats in 2022.
HOW DID BSP FARE IN THE REGIONS OF UP?
In Purvanchal also, where BSP once enjoyed a tight grip on voters, the exit poll predicts a dismal show by the BSP with a vote share of 13% and just 3 seats out of 139.
In Awadh, the BSP is again expected to show a poor performance with a vote share of 1% and winning only 1 seat.
In Bundelkhand, which is the most impoverished part of UP, the BJP is expected to sweep all the 19 seats here with SP and BSP getting no seats.
BSP’S CORE VOTE BANK HAS MOVED
The SC community, which forms 21% of UP’s population, has had jatav and non-jatav voters traditionally inclined towards the BSP since the party’s inception. Except for the Ram Mandir movement in 1991, the jatavs and non-jatavs have stuck with the BSP.
In the 2014 Lok Sabha elections, the BJP made a considerable dent in the non-jatav vote as it swept the state with 72 seats. The non-jatavs comprise pasis, dhobis, khatiks, koris and dhanuks. It is the pasis who went with the BJP in 2014 and in 2017 too.
As per the 2022 exit polls, BSP is to get 62% jatav votes, and 15% non-jatav votes. The party’s main 38% of jatav and 85% of non-jatav votes seem to have shifted from BSP and moved to the BJP and even SP.
As per the exit poll data, the BJP is getting 21% jatav and 52% non-jatav Dalit vote in UP elections 2022. Even BSP’s wooing of the Brahmin community doesn’t seem to have made an impact in the elections this time.
BSP’S LOSS IS BJP’S GAIN?
If we go by the trends of exit polls, then no doubt BSP’s loss is BJP’s gain. The BJP got former Mayor of Uttarakhand, Baby Rany Maurya, to contest from Agra’s Reserved SC seat in 2022. The plan was to dent the jatav and non-jatav vote of the BSP. Maurya was made the jatav face of the BJP, and it looks like the gamble of the party has played off this time around. The chunk of non-jatav vote that drifted away from BSP seems to have gone the SP way.
Moreover, Mayawati’s slow approach in campaigning also kept the Dalit voter confused this time. Even when she began her campaigning, the BSP supremo attacked SP more than she did the BJP. Therefore, much of the Dalit vote went directly to the BJP.
Even in 2019, when the SP and BSP came together to contest the General Elections, the BSP won 10 seats while SP had to settle for 5. There was no transfer of the BSP vote to the SP back then too. In 2022, looks like the same trend is here, with the Dalit voter going for BJP’s Yogi Adityanath over SP’s Akhilesh Yadav.
Courtesy : Daily o
Note: This news piece was originally published in dailyo.in and used purely for non-profit/non-commercial purposes exclusively for Human Rights objectives.