["64.22 per cent of voters exercised their franchise in 73 assembly
constituencies in the first of the seven-phase UP polls, the Election
Commission said."
(Source: 
<http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/elections/assembly-elections/uttar-pradesh/news/63-voter-turnout-in-first-phase-of-up-elections-ec/articleshow/57099046.cms>.)]

http://www.hindustantimes.com/assembly-elections/up-election-how-bjp-changes-its-narrative-within-50-kms-from-hindutva-to-secularism/story-MIXSqLqEenSi9lWbTXg28I.html?li_source=LI&li_medium=recommended-for-you

UP election: How BJP changes its narrative within 50 kms, from
Hindutva to secularism
ASSEMBLY ELECTIONS Updated: Feb 11, 2017 07:42 IST

Vaibhav Jha
Hindustan Times, Noida

Bharatiya Janata Party president Amit Shah along with union minister
Mahesh Sharma, Noida MLA Vimla Batham and BJP candidate for Noida,
Pankaj Singh in a rally at Sector 44 in Noida on Sunday.(Sunil Ghosh /
HT Photo)
Hardcore Hindutva, caste equations, and communal harmony — the BJP has
separate, and disparate, narratives to woo voters of Noida, Dadri and
Jewar assembly constituencies located within 50km of each other in
Gautam Budh Nagar district.

These three are among 73 constituencies in western Uttar Pradesh that
will vote on Saturday in the first of the seven-phase staggered
elections in the state.

The BJP’s campaign is led by party chief Amit Shah, and Union
ministers Rajnath Singh, Piyush Goyal and Mahesh Sharma, who
represents Gautam Budh Nagar in Parliament. The party’s poll plank is
development and demonetisation, but the rhetoric boils down to local
issues and sentiments in the three seats close to the national
capital.

In Noida, party president Shah invoked the cow slaughter narrative for
the majority Hindu electorate.

Read | UP election: What’s at stake for BSP, SP, BJP and RLD in
crucial ‘make or break’ phase 1

He announced that a BJP government in the state, if the party wins the
polls, will ban all unregulated slaughterhouses. Also, “anti-Romeo”
squads will be set up to fight “Samajwadi Party goons” and “hang them
upside down”.

Power minister Goyal tried to woo voters belonging to the Vaishya or
trader community of Noida. He drew a parallel between the BJP’s
ideology and that of legendary Vaishya king, Agrasen.

He said traders have been the hardest hit by rising crime in the state
under the Samajwadi Party government.


Son of home minister Rajnath Singh and the BJP candidate for Noida -
Pankaj Singh. (Sunil Ghosh / HT Photo )
Union home minister Singh’s son, Pankaj Singh, is the BJP candidate for Noida.

If caste lines were cast in Noida, a hardline Hindutva plot played out
in Dadri — where communal fault-lines continue to fester after a
55-year-old Muslim man, Mohammad Ikhlaq, was lynched on the suspicion
of slaughtering a cow for a family feast in September 2015.

At Ikhlaq’s village, Bisada, Hindu families are vexed over the arrest
of 18 youngsters for the murder. The anger and antagonism increased
when one of the suspects died in custody last October. Villagers held
a meeting on a public ground and demanded justice. Hate speeches were
reportedly heard.

Four months on, the BJP held a rally at the same venue with ministers
Singh and Sharma canvassing for party candidate Tejpal Singh Nagar, a
Gujjar.

Read more

BJP fields power minister Piyush Goyal to woo Noida traders

UP Polls: Venkaiah Naidu uses realty bill to woo Noida’s urban voters
Sharma spoke about the glorious history of Rajputs, saying “warriors
such as Maharana Pratap are worthy of respect and not Man Singh”.

Maharana Pratap fought the battle of Haldighati against Man Singh,
commander of the Mughal forces.

The minister’s dog-whistle speech was not lost on the audience —
Rajputs who fought against the Mughals are respected, not those sided
with them.

Those speaking after him seized the narrative, and called India’s
Independence in 1947 not only the end to British rule but also freedom
from “barbaric terrorists” who arrived before the European
colonialists.

Caste done, Hindutva done; Jewar followed a different storyline.


BJP supporters listening to party president Amit Shah in a rally in
Noida on Sunday. (Sunil Ghosh / HT Photo )
When Singh and Sharma landed at Rabupura inter-college public ground
on Thursday to campaign for party candidate Dhirendra Singh, a
50,000-strong crowd was waiting to hear them. Seated on the front row
were about 60 Muslim men and women.

Their presence is not surprising as Rabupura has a sizeable Muslim
population that has been supporting Dhirendra Singh for the past 30
years. In the previous assembly polls, he lost the Jewar seat as a
Congress candidate to Ved Ram Bhati of the BSP by a small margin. The
Congress veteran recently switched to the BJP.

The BJP leaders recalled in Jewar the joint struggle by “Hindu-Muslim
brothers” in India’s fight for Independence.

Read more

BJP’s Jewar candidate Dhirendra Singh pulls a mammoth crowd for rally

Pakistan turning out to be a vote-catcher for Rajnath Singh in UP
Home minister Singh narrated an anecdote about freedom fighter
Ashfaqullah Khan, who was hanged alongside Ram Prasad Bismil. “When
Ashfaqullah was asked his last wish, he told the jailer to inform his
mother that he married his bride at the gallows. Then he explained to
jailer that the bride is freedom and he will meet her when he is
hanged.”

For his part, Sharma spoke about king Alexander in high regard — quite
a departure from his Dadri speech when he cautioned the voters about
outsiders and invaders.

He accused BSP chief Mayawati of dividing Muslim and Dalit voters
along religion and caste lines.

“Do remember that when Sikander (Alexander) came to India, he refused
to sit on an elephant (BSP’s poll symbol) and chose a horse as his
ride… Only the BJP can work towards the welfare of all sections of
society,” Sharma said.



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