Early last week Chief Minister Akhilesh Yadav told this reporter that Samajwadi Party would regain power in Uttar Pradesh. “Just wait and watch. We have everything under control,” he said.
His confidence was in sharp contrast to the public narrative after he had unfurled a banner of revolt against his father Mulayam Singh Yadav by getting himself elected as national president of the party and following attempts by both the factions of Samajwadi Party to claim the party’s election symbol—the ‘bicycle’.
Pundits were convinced that Samajwadi Party had lost the plot. That it was the chief minister’s uncle Shivpal Yadav who controlled the party organisation and purse strings; that Akhilesh Yadav had moved in too late to assert his independence and that the Election Commission would take the safe way out and freeze the symbol.
Sensing the scepticism in this correspondent, the chief minister said by way of a parting shot, “I have my ears to the ground. My feedback is Samajwadi Party is coming back to power. We are getting support from all sections of society.”
Indeed, Akhilesh Yadav did appear to have overcome whatever anti-incumbency feelings there were. BJP’s state general secretary Vijay Bahadur Pathak said candidly that BJP was up against Akhilesh Yadav’s popular image.
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“I have my ears to the ground. My feedback is Samajwadi Party is coming back to power. We are getting support from all sections of society.”Akhilesh Yadav
Akhilesh Yadav also seemed to be aware public perception and public opinion had changed in the last few months, possibly largely because of a communication campaign run by Harvard University Professor Steve Jarding, who had been drafted to help the CM’s team to strategise.
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Professor Jarding was introduced to Akhilesh Yadav by one of his students Advait Vikram Singh, and has been working with the Samajwadi Party since August last year, when the team acknowledges that he has helped in building Akhilesh’s image brick by brick. His 100 plus team is working only in the rural areas. And by his own admission he has “human or technological reach” in over 98% of the households in rural UP.
Jarding, a campaign manager and political consultant for the Democratic Party in the US, teaches public policy at Harvard’s Kennedy School. He has been a campaigner, manager, political consultant and strategist since 1980. His clients included Hillary Clinton, former US vice-president Al Gore and Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy.
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