New Delhi, February 1: JD(U) and RLD are exploring the possibility of an umbrella alliance with Congress and some smaller parties in Uttar Pradesh for the 2017 Assembly elections after the JD(U)-RJD-Congress coalition inflicted a humiliating defeat on BJP-led NDA in the Bihar polls.
Sources said RLD chief Ajit Singh had a meeting with JD(U) President Sharad Yadav a couple of days back during which the two leaders discussed the broad contours of a larger coalition against the BJP at a time when both SP and BSP, the two major parties in the state, have ruled out forging any alliance.
The RLD chief had also discussed the issue with Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar in Delhi last month when the latter was here for the launch of Yadav’s autobiography.
Peace Party chief Ayub Ansari had also met Nitish Kumar and JD(U) general secretary K C Tyagi to discuss the issue, sources said. Peace Party has its presence in Eastern UP, mainly in areas around Gorakhpur.
Some clarity on such an alliance is likely to emerge in a day or two after JD(U)’s state executive meeting in Lucknow today, they said.
Tyagi, a senior party leader from Uttar Pradesh who has been assigned the task of organizing a joint rally of the RLD and JD(U) in western Uttar Pradesh said, “We are keen to be part of any anti-BJP campaign or front.
“In any such campaign in western Uttar Pradesh, RLD is an important element. Any grand alliance minus RLD will not be successful in Western UP,” he said.
When asked whether the party is in talks with RLD on the issue of an alliance in Uttar Pradesh, Tyagi said, “We keep talking to RLD leaders. Nitishji and Sharadji have spoken to the RLD leadership”.
Sources in JD(U) said the party was also keen on forging an alliance with Congress in Assam, but the latter’s state unit was not inclined.
Janata Dal had 22 MPs in Uttar Pradesh in 1991, when Mulayam Singh Yadav and Chandra Shekhar parted ways with V P Singh and formed Samajwadi Janata Party.
Since then Janata Dal and later Janata Dal (United) have been on decline there. In 1996, the party headed by Sharad Yadav had 6 MLAs, which came down to two in 2002 Assembly polls.
Buoyed by the victory in Bihar, the party feels it can rejuvenate its moribund unit in Uttar Pradesh in alliance with parties like RLD and Congress.
JD(U), which is running a coalition government with RJD in Bihar, is hopeful that Lalu Prasad will campaign for the secular umbrella alliance, if it comes about, despite SP chief Mulayam Singh Yadav being his relative.
The SP chief had walked out of the JD(U)-RJD-Congress alliance in Bihar and formed a third front to contest the polls.