Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
05NEWDELHI5593
2005-07-20 09:45:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy New Delhi
Cable title:  

UTTAR PRADESH GOVERNMENT SHAKY - COULD FALL SHORTLY

Tags:  PGOV PTER ECON PINR IN 
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This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 04 NEW DELHI 005593 

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 07/20/2015
TAGS: PGOV PTER ECON PINR IN
SUBJECT: UTTAR PRADESH GOVERNMENT SHAKY - COULD FALL SHORTLY

Classified By: PolCouns Geoff Pyatt, for Reasons 1.4 (B, D)

C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 04 NEW DELHI 005593

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 07/20/2015
TAGS: PGOV PTER ECON PINR IN
SUBJECT: UTTAR PRADESH GOVERNMENT SHAKY - COULD FALL SHORTLY

Classified By: PolCouns Geoff Pyatt, for Reasons 1.4 (B, D)


1. (C) Summary: In a July 13-15 visit to Uttar Pradesh (UP)
Poloff met with a wide variety of interlocutors who
speculated that the two year rule of Chief Minister Mulayam
Singh Yadav would soon come to an end. Pervasive
mis-governance and corruption, and a fast-deteriorating law
and order situation, that has seen organized crime entering
into all facets of public life, have stretched UP to its
limits. Determined to end Yadav's rule, the UPA could
dissolve the government at any time. With neither Congress
nor the SP in any position to return to power, the low-caste
focused BSP is likely to win any upcoming election, perhaps
with an absolute majority. BSP leader Mayawati is intent on
quickly gaining control of the reins of government and
cleaning house. A decisive BSP victory in UP could cause
Congress to concede control of the state to Mayawati in
exchange for BSP entry into the UPA, ending Congress hopes of
regaining the Hindi belt. However, a rejuvenated BSP could
also provide a solid block of MP's to the UPA government in
New Delhi and reduce its reliance on the Left. End Summary.

Seismic Shift in Lucknow
--------------


2. (U) In Lucknow from July 13-15, Poloff met with political
leaders, academics, civil servants, journalists, and Shia
Muslim maulvis and community leaders. Although the time
frame is uncertain, most agreed that a change of government
in India's largest state (population 166 million) is
imminent, and that Mayawati will return as Chief Minister,
perhaps winning an absolute majority in new elections. While
Poloff was in Lucknow, Chief Minister Mulayam Singh Yadav
called an emergency session of the Legislative Assembly with
only three days notice, sparking speculation that he could
dissolve the government and call for new elections.


3. (C) Lucknow editors from the regional editions of the
"Pioneer" and "Asian Age" confirmed to Poloff on July 14 that
the people of UP so deeply resent SP misrule that the UPA
could dismiss the state government and impose governor's rule
at "the time of its choosing." They predicted that the UPA

would likely sideline the notoriously corrupt state police
force and introduce the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF)
and other centrally-controlled paramilitaries to restore law
and order, forcing the now-dominant "mafias" which permeate
all levels of the UP public life, to "lie low."


4. (C) Both journalists predicted that the BSP would be the
big winner in any new election, pointing out that the party
was highly organized, has spent the past two years "laying
the groundwork" necessary to win an election, and that most
people in UP concede that it provide a modicum of good
governance. The editors confirmed that there was vast and
growing disgust with the SP and its rule in UP and predicted
this resentment would result in a huge swing against him in
any election. The reporters could not confirm whether the
BSP could return to power on its own or would seek an
alliance with Congress to push it over the top.

Congress Can't Gain Momentum
--------------


5. (U) Press reports indicate that while Congress is strong
in New Delhi, it has no chance of returning to power in
Lucknow. A report in the Lucknow "Pioneer" characterized the
Uttar Pradesh (UP) Congress as a "Party heading to nowhere,"
attributing the lack of a momentum to Rahul Gandhi's failure
to participate in party activities, "an eerie disinterest
among the top leadership," and growing division.
Characterizing Party President Salman Khursheed and
"unrelentingly arrogant," the "Pioneer" pointed to conflict
between his proponents and opponents so intense that it
recently led to fistfights in the streets of Lucknow.
Khursheed announced in May that Congress would hold 100
rallies throughout the state, but nothing happened until July

11. To date Congress has held two rallies and canceled two
more.


6. (C) In their conversation with Poloff on July 13,
Khursheed and Congress Spokesman Rajesh Pandey were upbeat
despite the negative press reporting. They confirmed that
the SP government cannot last, attributing Mulayam's imminent
downfall to uncontrolled corruption, lack of governance, and
a breakdown in law and order, which have caused a total halt
to development, investment, and maintenance of the state's
flimsy infrastructure. Insisting that the SP has "taken no
practical steps" to help Muslims, Pandey was confident that
they would withdraw from the SP and come back to his party.
Saying that UP voters were "sick of casteism," he insisted
that there was a longing in the state for a return to rule by
a national party.


7. (C) Khursheed confirmed that Congress had no hope of
returning to power in UP, saying that it could take 10 years
for his party to orchestrate a "bottom-up reform movement" to
permanently change UP politics. His goal is to increase the
Congress tally to 66 seats in the UP Legislative Assembly of
402 seats. This means, he conceded, that Congress will have
to find a coalition partner, as it cannot afford to remain
outside of government. Khursheed affirmed that without
Ministers, Congress has no access to the patronage required
to become a real force. Khursheed refused to confirm whether
Congress would eventually sign on with the BSP or the SP,
saying that it had to be realistic and go with the party that
provided the most benefits.

The BJP Sees Power Slipping Away
--------------


8. (C) Congress leader Pandey dismissed the BJP, saying that
its fortunes were declining, as Advani and Hindutva were
losing their appeal and the powerful Brahmin votebank was
leaving to join Congress. Predicting that former PM and
proven votegetter AB Vajpayee would soon leave active
politics, Pandey said the BJP would then lose its sole source
of popular appeal. He opined that the recent BSP program to
enlist Brahmins would fail, while claiming that his party
would "wean the dalits from the BSP.


9. (C) On July 13, BJP President Kesri Nath Tripathi
insisted to Poloff that his party would continue to stress
Hindutva as the best way to return to power. He also claimed
that the BJP would benefit from the recent spate of terrorist
attacks in India. Pointing out that Hindus constitute 80
percent of the population and will always vote to support
Hindu values, he asserted they are not expressing their
outrage against the attacks and support for Hindutva because
Hindus are "tolerant" and "not demonstrative." Implying that
only a BJP government can tackle these issues, Tripathi
claimed that Indians know Pakistan is "the mother of
terrorism," and is bent on using a "terrorist nexus" of
Naxalites, Nepali Maoists, and Islamic fanatics to
destabilize India.


10. (C) Tripathi characterized the recent visit of Party
President LK Advani to Ayodhya as "very successful."
Pointing out that the BJP held Mulayam responsible for the
near success of the terrorist attack there, he implied that
the Chief Minister is "100 percent pro-Muslim," and does not
want a Hindu temple built at the Ram birthplace. Since
Congress and the SP both "encouraged terrorism," Tripathi
noted, the BJP is the only party capable of dealing with this
challenge.


11. (C) Tripathi was also convinced that the Mulayam
government would soon fall and that state elections are
imminent, noting that with the law and order situation
deteriorating daily, the governor could call for a dismissal.
With Mulayam weakened by non-performance, he added, an
election in UP could well result in a "hung assembly" and
continuing governor's rule.


12. (C) Conceding that the BJP was number three after the
BSP and SP in the last elections, Tripathi confirmed that it
could only return to power in coalition with one of these
regional parties. However, disappointed by Mayawati's
"unreliability" and opposed to Mulayam, Tripathi confirmed
that the BJP is determined to go it alone. Instead of
seeking out a coalition partner, the party will inaugurate an
"education campaign" emphasizing the poor record of the
regional parties and painting the BJP as the party of "good
governance."

The BSP's Time is Now
--------------


13. (C) In a July 14 conversation with Poloff, BSP General
Secretary Satish Chandra Mishra was extremely confident that

SIPDIS
his party was set to return to power after two years in
opposition. Mishra expected the SP government to fall and
the BSP to win an absolute majority in upcoming elections.
He pointed out that in the 2003 state elections, the BSP lost
100 seats by 2,000 votes or less and is set to win most of
them in a future poll. Mishra noted that the recent BSP
rally to welcome Brahmins into the party attracted 300,000
participants from all over the state, implying that the
addition of Brahmin voters would provide the needed impetus
to ensure a BSP win.


14. (C) Mishra pointed out that Mulayam is losing strength
every day, and is well aware that the Congress governor is
monitoring the deteriorating law and order situation and
could dissolve the house at any time. With this in mind,
Mulayam is likely to dissolve the assembly and call a new
elections while he still has a chance of winning, and could
have the Legislative Assembly name him as "caretaker Chief
Minister." Such a move would enable him to control state
resources that he could use to rig the election. In
addition, Mishra (one of the state's leading lawyers) has
filed a civil case contesting the 2003 defection of 40
legislators from the BSP to the SP. The case could be
decided in the next several weeks and if Mishra wins, the 40
SP legislators would be asked to vacate their seats, the SP
would lose its majority and the government would fall.


15. (C) Mishra predicted that Chief Minister Yadav would
unleash a wave of violence, intimidation and vote-rigging in
a last-ditch attempt to retain his hold on power, but all his
efforts would fail. Such tactics, he pointed out, only work
in by-elections when the "goons" can be concentrated to
intimidate voters and local police can be convinced to look
the other way. This time, he noted, the election would be
state-wide and the SP would not have the needed "muscle." In
addition, the police are aware that the SP is on its way out
and will remain neutral.


16. (C) Mayawati has an "action plan" emphasized Mishra,
that will quickly turn the situation around and revive UP.
Her first priority after taking office will be to "clean up"
the state administration, restore effective governance and
take on the "mafias" that have become entrenched during the
past two years of SP rule. Mishra claimed that although
Mayawati has received numerous death threats from the
criminals, she will pursue put them and their SP supporters
behind bars. Mishra insisted that relations between Mayawati
and Congress President Sonia Gandhi are very good, hinting
that after Mayawati's election, Congress would sever ties
with the SP both in New Delhi and Lucknow and extend support
to the BSP. In New Delhi, he claimed, the BSP would join the
government with several of its MP's slated for cabinet
positions. In exchange for BSP support, Congress would have
to concede BSP control of UP.

Comment
--------------

17. (C) Like many Indian politicians, Mulayam has grown out
of touch as he surrounds himself with sycophants and does not
seem to be aware of his inherent weakness. Few in Lucknow
give him much chance of survival. Although Poloff spent the
entire afternoon with SP leader Bhagwati Singh, he studiously
avoided politics and made no attempt to defend his Chief
Minister.


18. (C) With 80 seats in Parliament, UP is so important that
a change of government will have national repercussions.
Should Mayawati win a working majority on her own as many
suspect, Congress would have to concede BSP control of the
state, and the BSP could win a long-term hold on power in
Lucknow. This would encourage BSP ambitions to be a national
voice for dalits and it could pick up additional MP's in
future national elections. Should a revived BSP press for
entry into the UPA, it could increase the UPA margin in
parliament. Such a move would push the SP and its Left
allies closer together and hasten the day when the Left will
withdraw its support from the UPA and announce the formation
of a "third front" to challenge UPA rule. However, BSP
support would also liberate the UPA government from its
current reliance on the Left's support, at a time when
Manmohan Singh appears to be growing increasingly fed-up with
the criticisms and negativism of his Communist allies.
BLAKE