Politics
Uttar Pradesh CM Yogi Adityanath. (Subhankar Chakraborty/Hindustan Times via Getty Images)
The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has pulled off two stunning upsets in Uttar Pradesh, by winning byelections to Rampur and Azamgarh parliamentary constituencies. Both were prestigious strongholds of the Samajwadi Party (SP) for over a decade. The SP was also, always, the party to beat in provincial elections.
Mulayam Singh Yadav won from Azamgarh in 2014, and his son, Akhilesh, in 2019. Rampur returned the SP’s former talisman, Jayaprada, twice – in 2004 and 2009, and Azam Khan, the party’s Muslim face, in 2019. And, the SP had consistently led in most of the assembly seats and segments of these two seats, in every assembly and Lok Sabha election going back to 2009.
Here are the provisional results of the two parliamentary constituencies:
Rampur
Interestingly, the BJP has managed to do exactly that. As the vote swing table below shows, its vote share increased by 9 per cent from 2019, of which, 7 per cent came from the SP.
Third, the BSP, which used to have a decent presence in Rampur, and even won in the seat in 2004, has been wiped out. Today, every last Dalit vote has shifted to the BJP. The significance of that will become increasingly apparent, on a broader canvas, by 2024.
A chart below of how the BJP’s vote share has grown after 2009 tells it all:
Fifth, the Congress has withered to such an extent in western UP that it didn’t even care to contest the Rampur elections. This is a humiliating decline for a party which won this seat nine times in the last century.
Sixth, historical data shows that the BJP always does better in general elections than in assembly elections. Comparing the Rampur byelection results with those of the March 2022 assembly elections, we see that the BJP increased its vote share by a whopping 15 per cent.
While it is simply too early to extrapolate these results to 2024, they do, however indicate, at least qualitatively, the nature of the potential BJP sweep in UP.
Azamgarh
Swarajya’s prediction last week was that the SP had the higher chances of victory. Our analysis showed that the BJP could win only if the BSP split the Muslim vote. That is exactly what has happened in the June 2022 byelection, with the BSP polling 29 per cent.
Indeed, as a table below shows, the BJP’s vote share actually went down marginally from what it got in 2019:
Ergo, the only reason the BJP won is because the BSP took back from the SP, all the votes it gave in 2019, when the SP and BSP were briefly allied.
So again, we see that the BJP performs better in general elections than in assembly elections, even in areas like Azamgarh where it is relatively less successful.
All data from Election Commission of India website.