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He was speaking to reporters here a day after Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar and his deputy Tejashwi Yadav met Congress chief Mallikarjaun Kharge and Rahul Gandhi, who described the initiative as ”historic”. The meeting assumed significance as it is being viewed as the first major step in forging opposition unity and taking it forward ahead of the next Lok Sabha polls despite differences among some regional outfits.
Akhilesh Yadav arrived in Indore on Thursday as part of his two-day visit to Madhya Pradesh.
Responding to reporters’ query whether his party would join the opposition alliance, Yadav avoided giving a direct answer and said, ”This is a big question. What name are you giving to it (the grand alliance)? But I know one thing that people of Uttar Pradesh will unseat the BJP.” He said the citizens of the country want change of power.
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On March 17, Yadav had met West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee in Kolkata. Both Banerjee’s Trinamool Congress (TMC) and Yadav-led SP had said the two parties would stay away from both the Congress and the BJP and indicated possible talks with other regional players ahead of the 2024 Lok Sabha elections.
Yadav had lent his party’s support to the TMC during the 2021 West Bengal assembly poll, which was reciprocated by Banerjee when she campaigned for the former in Uttar Pradesh during the 2022 election in that state.
Yadav is scheduled to visit the birthplace of Dr B R Ambedkar in Mhow tehsil, about 25 km from Indore district, on Friday, which is the birth anniversary of the architect of the Constitution.
Hitting out at the saffron party, the SP chief said, ”As long as the BJP remains in power, the Constitution framed by Dr Ambedkar and the rights enshrined to people in it will be in danger. Now the question is whether people will have the right to vote or not in democracy?” Yadav accused the central government of selling the stakes in public sector undertakings to private players and said under such circumstances what would be the fate of the provisions of the Constitution and recommendations of the Mandal Commission meant for the deprived sections of the society.
Targeting the Centre over the high prices of petrol, diesel, cooking gas cylinders and the issue of unemployment, he said the BJP government was taking the people for a ride. Yadav said his party will fight the upcoming Assembly polls in Madhya Pradesh with full force, but did not specify how many seats it would contest.
There are 230 Assembly seats in Madhya Pradesh, where the BJP is currently in power.
Commenting on BJP general secretary Kailash Vijayvargiya’s recent comment that girls in ”bad dresses” look like ‘Shurpanakha’, the sister of demon king Ravana, the former UP chief minister said that those following the BJP ideology want to put restrictions on people’s freedom. ”If BJP people are talking about dresses today, they might tomorrow impose a ban on the use of social networking sites Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp and Twitter,” he added.