Final election results 2018: BSP chief
Mayawati said her party will support the Congress in Madhya Pradesh as it
fought the election to keep BJP out
The Congress's first overture to Mayawati went yesterday, as soon as it realised that its climb to the top of the heap in Madhya Pradesh in yesterday's vote count was slow and uncertain.
NEW DELHI:
Mayawati
today said her Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) would support the Congress in Madhya
Pradesh and Rajasthan, to keep the BJP out of power. Her support will take the
Congress past the finishing line in both states, where it missed a majority in
elections.
"Our
aim is to keep the BJP out of power. And that is why we have decided to
support the Congress in Madhya Pradesh," Mayawati said this morning. The
BSP has won two seats in the 230-seat Madhya Pradesh assembly, in which the
Congress has emerged the largest party but is two short of the majority mark of
116. The BJP is not far behind, with 109 seats.
"We
have decided to support the Congress in Rajasthan as well. We fought these
elections to ensure that the BJP does not come back to power," said
Mayawati.
The
Congress, which wrote to Governor Anandiben Patel late last night staking claim
to power, is expected to meet her this morning.
While
announcing her support, Mayawati did not spare the Congress her criticism. She
said the Congress ruled most of the states in India but regional parties
emerged because it was not working for the welfare of the people. "If the
Congress had performed well, there would not have been a BJP either," she
said.
Congress workers
celebrate outside the party office in New Delhi (AFP)
The Congress's first overture to Mayawati went yesterday, as soon as it realised that its climb to the top of the heap in Madhya Pradesh in yesterday's vote count was slow and uncertain.
After
receiving Kamal Nath's call, Mayawati called her leaders to Delhi for a
meeting.
The BSP
chief, a powerful Dalit leader from Uttar Pradesh with influence in swathes of
rural north India, had snubbed the Congress during talks for seat-sharing in
Madhya Pradesh and its neighbour Chhattisgarh. Acrimonious exchanges between
Mayawati and the Congress at the time dampened hopes for a united opposition
bloc to take on the BJP in next year's national election.
Mayawati
had also skipped an opposition meeting held on Monday to establish unity goals
for 2019. Her ally in the state, Samajwadi Party leader Akhilesh Yadav, had
also given the meeting a miss.
0 Comments