Politics
From left - CM Yogi Adityanath, BSP chief Mayawati, Rahul Gandhi, SP chief Akhilesh Yadav
The forthcoming assembly elections in Uttar Pradesh were finally quantified for the first time this election season, when ABP News broadcast the results of a Cvoter pre-poll survey on 3 September.
The survey assumes that Akhilesh Yadav’s Samajwadi Party (SP) would ally with the Rashtriya Lok Dal (RLD), while the Congress (INC) and Mayawati’s Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) would contest alone. These are the opinion poll findings:
Is this survey valid, and if yes, then to what extent?
An apples-to-apples comparison is not possible here, since the electoral alignments between various parties have changed significantly from election to election. The possibility of the BSP tying up with the SP, as it did in the 2019 general elections, or of the Congress going with the SP, like in 2017, or of all three coming together, cannot be ruled out at present. Any one of these combinations would shift the seat tally sizably.
For background, here are the coalitions of the past two elections:
In the 2017 assembly elections, the RLD and the BSP went it alone. Both were badly yorked by a Modi wave. The RLD won only one seat of the 277 it contested in; that is a success rate of just 0.4 per cent. The BSP fared only slightly better, winning 19, or 4.7 per cent, of the 403 candidates they gave tickets to.
The Congress and the SP fought on a joint platform of ‘Do Ladke’, or ‘Two Lads’ – a cheery reference to Rahul Gandhi and Akhilesh Yadav, the two young men in charge of their respective parties. Their expectation was that a grand coming together of every last Muslim vote under the SP’s OBC Yadav umbrella would propel them to a majority. However, the SP won only 47 seats, and the Congress, a paltry 7.
In the 2019 general elections, the alignments shifted. This time, the SP went with the RLD and the BSP (an unthinkable political coming together, considering what Mulayam Singh Yadav put Mayawati through in the 1990s). The formula flopped in the face of a monstrous Modi wave, and won them only 109 assembly segments with 39 per cent of the vote share.
That left the Congress out in the cold, alone with its hubris, and reduced to picking up scraps. Their vote share stayed at 6 per cent, and they led in only eight segments; the bulk of those was in the only Lok Sabha constituency they won – Sonia Gandhi’s Rae Bareilly.
The BJP was dented by the SP-BSP tie-up, and the SBSP had left the NDA, but it was still enough for them to attract 51 per cent of the vote share and lead in 284 segments. That’s how dramatically voting patterns had changed in Uttar Pradesh.
What alliances might emerge in 2021 is anyone’s guess. If the Shiv Sena could align with the Congress in Maharashtra, then anything is possible, and nothing can be ruled out. In that light, the vote shares surveyed by ABP-Cvoter offer us an opportunity to do some election math of our own.
Here are the party-wise outcomes and swings in Uttar Pradesh:
The seat swing column in Table 2 won’t tally fully since minor players like the RLD and SBSP shifted alliances. Similarly, the vote swing column in Table 3 won’t exactly match the historical data since the ABP figures are for coalitions, while the historical figures are for individual parties.
Parsed thus, we see that 6.6 per cent of the BSP vote is shifting to the SP, while 1.2 per cent of the Congress vote shifts to the BJP.
This is where the survey’s constraints surface.
We can understand 1.2 per cent of the Congress vote shifting to the BJP, since the Congress vote base has been shrinking steadily for the past few decades; the party is in terminal decline (see here, for a historical assessment of how the Congress crumbled during the late 1980s and early 1990s in UP).
We can also understand the shift of 6.6 per cent votes from the BSP to the SP. This is the Muslim vote, mulishly driven by an alarmist Ashrafi fiction of minority victimhood and once again seeking strength in Yadav numbers.
But it is almost impossible to accept that no vote shift will take place from the BSP to the BJP. This is because, the 2019 general election results distinctly showed a secular shift of non-Jatav Dalit votes from the BSP to the BJP, along with a shift of non-Yadav OBC votes from the SP to the BJP. This trend has to reflect somewhere in the survey, if it is to be deemed representative.
Indeed, in qualitative terms, the very fact that the ABP survey indicates an efflux of Muslim votes from the BSP to the SP is indirect evidence of an ongoing efflux of Dalit votes from the BSP to the BJP. No one sticks with a sinking ship for too long.
Now, we can’t gauge what the actual figure might be, until a few more surveys are conducted. Nonetheless, as on date, as per this writer, the NDA’s base vote share in UP should be in the 43-45 per cent band. Also, new political alliances would send current calculations into the bin; for instance, if the Congress, the BSP and the SP got together, voting patterns and outcomes would change by a fair bit.
However, this much is clear in closing:
One, the longer the Congress and the BSP stay on their own, the more they will shrink. Both will lose their non-Muslim bases preferentially to the BJP than to the SP.
Two, the Muslim vote is moving towards the SP, making it the primary opposition party. That leaves Congress and BSP with an existential dilemma: align and lose one’s identity, or go it alone and lose the election.
Three, The BJP’s vote share will go up from the 39.7 per cent it got in 2017 (the NDA got 41.4 per cent then). Under present circumstances, there is, conversely, a very low probability of the BJP’s (NDA’s) vote share going down by ten whole percentage points, from the 51.2 it got in 2019.
Four, if the index of opposition unity is even slightly less than 100 per cent, the highest probability is that the BJP would sweep Uttar Pradesh again.