Lucknow: There is a "pro-incumbency" wave in Uttar Pradesh rather than an "anti-incumbency" one, and the party will break all its previous victory records in the ongoing assembly polls in the state, Deputy Chief Minister Dinesh Sharma has said. In an interview to the media, Sharma also said it was the party's decision not to field him in the assembly elections, and dismissed suggestions that Brahmins, a community he hails from, are unhappy with the BJP.
"The BJP is going to break all its previous records. There is no anti-incumbency in the state, rather it's pro-incumbency. We are getting enthusiastic responses wherever we go due to works done by the Yogi Adityanath government," he said. He said this time it's not the party but people who are contesting the polls for the BJP. "Huge crowds and their response show this. Also, it's not candidates but the party symbol which is contesting the polls." The BJP had won 312 seats in the 403-member UP house in 2017 and together with its NDA allies its strength had gone up to 325. Saffron party leaders have been claiming that their tally would surpass the 2017 figures.
Sharma was speculated to contest the assembly polls from any of the seats in Lucknow, but his name did not appear in the final party list. When asked about it, he said, "Final decision in our party is taken by the top leadership. I had been party's national vice president, incharge of Gujarat and my tenure in legislative council is till 2027. The party wanted me to do organisation work and I am doing that." Considered among the top three in the BJP government in the state, alongside Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath and his deputy Keshav Prasad Maurya, Sharma is the only among them who is not the poll fray.
All the three are members of the state legislative council at present. Sharma had served as a mayor of Lucknow Municipal Corporation for 10 years in the past. Among the star campaigners of the BJP, Sharma said he had visited 64 districts and addressed over 150 public meetings in favour of the party. Asked if there was any difference within the party on Adityanath being the chief ministerial candidate again, Sharma said, "There can be 'matbhed' (differences) within opposition, but in our party there are 'disha-nirdesh' (directions) from the leadership and all follow that." "As far as Yogiji is concerned, he is our CM face and everyone is seeking vote in his name," Sharma, a Lucknow university professor, said.