Aunt Dalit’s Politics

Mayawati expelled her nephew from the BSP. The reason is confusing. But her election doesn’t matter and won’t change
WHAutumn has passed. Once experts use it to speculate that Mayawati may become India’s first Dalit PM. The dust in these columns is still very thin and it has to be reminded that she is the first CM to complete the full semester. If she had a greater ambition, it was rational. Looking back, the 2014 LS results show how a new political wave will drive her in the opposite direction. BSP maintains a 20% voting share in UP, but scores 0/80. By 2024, even the voting share will drop to 10%. Today, Mayawati is the headline of political houses “cleaning”. But people are eager to see this revival of BSP well-intentioned people.
It is not the first time she has been fired her nephew Akash Anand or has been understood as her heir. There are differences in his opinion about whether the boots are too big or too small. The facts are a series BSP politicians have taken out to quit to grow The shadow of Mayawati. With the failure, she not only blamed her political rivals, but also Jatus, Yves, Muslims… Most sensitively, she was observed as “apne log”, and her own people gradually disappeared. Most of the drift has been BJP-wards – Success in laying pre-established social engineering through Dalit The first brick at the Ram Temple Foundation ceremony in 1989.
Likewise, there are currently no Dalit politicians who command political space like Mayawati, or Kanshi Ram. In other political parties, no matter how important they are, they can be said to be gears on the steering wheel. For some experts, experimenting with various political parties and politicians shows the confidence among the Dalits, which is a deepening of democracy. For others, this segmentation of Dalit representatives and votes is equivalent to weakening. They hope that the new generation of Dalit-Bahuyang politicians will rise from the new generation.
This article is an editorial opinion in the printed version of The Times of India.
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