This was our editorial comment when Mayawati became chief minister for the second time, after a brief brush with power in 1995 (‘Revolving-door politics’, IE, March 21, 1997). It tells you how much she has evolved since then as a politician...
Since conventional wisdom has heralded the era of coalition politics in India, it is difficult to fault either the BJP or the BSP for carrying that process to its logical conclusion in Uttar Pradesh. Charges of opportunism and unprincipled conduct may have a certain validity when viewed through the prism of ideological purity, but they are meaningless in the context of post-election coalition-building. In any case, last year’s fractured mandate ruled out all possibilities of any single party or alliance commanding a majority in the Assembly. The choice before the political parties was stark: persist with President’s rule or eschew purity for expediency. Six months of stalemate later, the BJP and BSP have settled for the latter. For this belated meeting of minds they must, of course, thank Governor Romesh Bhandari who made deal-based politics look far more attractive than Mulayam Singh Yadav’s proxy rule.
That the resolving door principle on which the BJP-BSP alliance has been cemented is inherently fragile hardly needs reiteration. With Kanshi Ram publicly distancing himself from guarantees and the BJP admitting that the arrangement will be reviewed in a year’s time, it is quite clear that the main actors in Wednesday’s drama are not inclined to look to the long-term. The BSP will be keen to use Mayawati’s six-month tenure as chief minister to plant its supporters in key bureaucratic positions, while the BJP will use its position of authority to chip away at the United Front government at the Centre. Both parties know that another election in UP is unavoidable. The present exercise is an endeavour to position themselves favourably for that eventuality and, if possible, link the assembly election to a general election where the BJP thinks it is in with a chance.
... contd.