Saturday, March 29, 2014

Here’s why Jagan won’t attempt any pre-poll alliances in Andhra

YSR Congress Chief Jagan Mohan Reddy.

Why is YS Jaganmohan Reddy not open to a pre-poll alliance with any political party? Jagan desires to leave the door ajar for a post-poll alliance with Narendra Modi-led Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), which is a hot favourite to occupy the treasury benches in the Parliament.


YSR Congress Chief Jagan Mohan Reddy.


As things evolved, there seems to be a deadlock – which is very natural in any negotiation process and is just a passing phase – in the seat-sharing talks between the Telugu Desam Party and the BJP. Both sides may, however, relent to strike a deal soon.


The TDP is worried that if its bid for a pre-poll pact with the BJP peters out, it will be advantage Jagan Reddy-led YSR Congress. Jagan has made it amply clear in a few TV interviews that he is not averse to aligning with the BJP and Modi, claiming that he is a “modern day politician, who has eschewed the archaic thought process.” He has also acknowledged the ‘administrative skills’ of Modi and his ‘development agenda’.


Jagan, time and again, has asserted that whoever guarantees the overall development of Andhra Pradesh will get his support. He has also unequivocally ruled out the possibility of any alliance with Sonia Gandhi-led Congress party, blaming the Congress for pushing Andhra Pradesh into a political quagmire and denting its development which was multiplying in geometric progression until his father YS Rajasekhara Reddy was alive.


Inspite of repeated assertions by Jagan that he would not align with the Congress, his observation that he would not mind supporting a “secular UPA” at the Centre in an interview to Rajdeep Sardesai, Editor-in-Chief of CNN-IBN, quite some time ago is being used by his detractors to highlight that the merger of YSR Congress with the Indian National Congress is plausible.


Nevertheless, Jagan takes shelter under the argument that how can he consider an alliance with the Congress which he holds responsible for “foisting false cases and imprisoning” him.


Jagan is said to be of the strong view that he would garner a large number of Lok Sabha seats – anywhere between 23 and 27 in both regions together – and that gives him greater bargaining power at the Centre, as the support of such a large number of MPs will be required for any coalition to form government in Delhi.


Though he foresees Modi standing ahead of others after the elections, Jagan cannot offer to enter a pre-poll pact for three reasons:


1. The vote bank his party is nursing includes Muslims, Christians, Dalits, and in some pockets, the backward classes. These sections may not like the YSRC joining hands with the BJP.


2. The BJP openly supported the bifurcation of Andhra Pradesh and Jagan’s party has taken a diametrically opposite stand on this issue. Jagan always wants himself to be seen as the champion of the united Andhra cause.


3. As his domain has shrunken just to 175 Assembly seats and 25 Lok Sabha seats in Seemaandhra region alone, he is staying focused on these constituencies and doesn’t want to leave many seats in adjustment.


The YSR Congress is pretty confident that it would secure a very comfortable, perhaps an absolute, majority in Seemandhra region both in the Assembly and Lok Sabha seats, enabling it to form the government in the about-to-be-formed Andhra Pradesh (or the residual Andhra Pradesh).


Senior BJP leader Venkaiah Naidu, in an interview given to TV5 on Friday said that the BJP was not averse to taking the support of the YSR Congress led by YS Jaganmohan Reddy in the post-poll scenario.


Though there is a speculation that there can be an alliance for the YSRC with the Communist Party of India-Marxists, the demands of the latter may not be acceptable to the former. However, the two parties are yet to sit at the negotiating table, if they need to seal the deal.


Jagan cannot entertain the other Communist party, the CPI, as it has taken a pro-Telangana stand. Also, CPI’s state secretary K Narayana made several vitriolic remarks against Jagan in the last three years, thinking that the CPI could be embraced by the TDP in alliance.


The prospect of an electoral alliance between the Congress and the Telangana Rashtra Samithi (TRS) has hit a roadblock in Telangana region, which would go to polls in the united Andhra Pradesh. As the things appear on the political canvas, the TRS has now almost slammed the door on the face of the Congress.


Though the love-hate relationship between the TRS and the Congress has either ebbed or peaked in the last several years, KCR has chosen to go it alone and begun giving a nebulous picture on the prospect of a poll alliance with the Congress, with the growing support base of TRS.


KCR firmly believes that the TRS may get anywhere between 50 to 60 Assembly seats and eight Lok Sabha seats to contest, if it goes for an alliance. The TRS believes it will win only 40 Assembly seats. The party is very strong in North Telangana. It will have to forego a few Assembly seats and some Lok Sabha seats as part of the quid pro quo arrangement with the Congress.


TRS leader Harish Rao and even KCR have indicated that the TRS would win in at least 75 Assembly seats and 12 Lok Sabha constituencies on its own. Even if it cannot measure up to its own expectations, the TRS leadership is now under the impression that it can manage victory in over 50 seats.


By throwing its weight behind the BJP in the post-poll scenario, the TRS nurses an ambition to enlist its support so that both governments at the Centre and the State would be interdependent.


The Congress, on the other hand, has almost tied up with the Communist Party of India by leaving Khammam Lok Sabha and eight Assembly seats in Telangana region.


Talks over the BJP-TDP tie-up have entered a crucial phase. Prakash Javadekar, the BJP’s in-charge of AP affairs, has held several rounds of parleys with TDP leaders ‘Sujana’ Chowdary and CM Ramesh and was closeted with Chandrababu Naidu on Friday for almost two hours. The BJP is demanding 45-48 Assembly seats and nine Lok Sabha seats in the adjustment in Telangana, and five Lok Sabha seats along with 25 Assembly seats in Seemandhra region. For now, there is a standoff in the talks, as both sides the other party is too big for their shoes.



Here’s why Jagan won’t attempt any pre-poll alliances in Andhra

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