Now a days local flavour getting wider acceptance in world wide. It creates history and rewrite it. Like, the regional parties in India gaining more importance in political arena. In forth coming loksabha election regional political land Lords will be decisive elements. The first one who recognised this factor was congress party. So they decided to go to making regional pacts. congress election managers got little advantage but they didn't won. one thing is sure. The biggest loser in this play is NDA led by BJP. 24 member alliance reduced to eight or nine members. The so called Third front is much ahead on Congress in number game. The major regional political parties are rallied under the banner of still uncristallised Third front. Other two fronts are led by biggest national parties in India. But the Third front is a consortium of regional parties. With left parties Telugudesam party and Thelangana rashtra samiti both are from Andhrapradesh, Janathadal(s), Bahujan samajwadi party from UP, AIADMK from thamilnadu, BJD from Orissa are major parties in the Third front. Major problem with in this front is parties except left are like prostitutes. They go with monitory and personal benefits. This history is proved one. BSP leader Mayawati will be biggest menace. Left block and BSP will get almost similar number in tally. But she will become single largest party in third front after election. So other parties are tolerating Mayawati. She knows it clearly. so her political tactics get upper hand among others. These parties will stick together up to may 16. Because they want each other to winning more seats. More seats will give more power to numerical strength.
After election third front may get around 130 seats. The fate of third front will be decided by number of seats won by UPA and NDA. Sometimes this block will support UPA. If NDA get upper hand in election then Third front will disintegrates and many of the allies will go with BJP. The ultimate gainers are Lords of regional parties and loosers are voters.
Sunday, March 15, 2009
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2 comments:
good article but slightly biased
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