Having salvaged the alliance from the brink, both Samajwadi Party and the Congress, agree political observers in the state, now face the far more difficult task of campaigning together and for each other on the ground. Till recently they were political rivals sniping at each other, but can they now persuade their supporters to see the other as an ally?
Rajesh Singh, a social scientist based at Gorakhpur, acknowledges that the advantage is with the alliance. “It has brought both the parties back in the race but electoral success would depend on coordination of workers on the ground. Congress leaders in particular will be hard put to explain why it did a U-turn after its “27 Saal-Uttar Pradesh Behaal” campaign.”
Concurs Manoj Dixit. “Going strictly by the votes polled by the two parties in 2012, it’s a winning combination. The two parties together had then polled 40% of the votes after having contested separately,” he said. Now by contesting together and avoiding even the ‘friendly fights’ of 2012, they should normally fare even better.
Leaders in both camps tried to strike a note of caution, worrying that the alliance was declared far too late. But even they agree that the alliance would help cement the minority votes—capable of tilting the scales in 143 out of 403 assembly constituencies.
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