Mulayam Singh Redoes 'Essentials' List For Akhilesh Yadav To Add Shivpal
Chief Minister Akhilesh Yadav embarked this morning on
a peace-keeping mission to the home of his father, Mulayam Singh, over
whom he has scored rights to use their Samajwadi Party's name and symbol
of the cycle.
Mulayam Singh, 77, has indicated he will not form a new party to contest
against his son in Uttar Pradesh, where voting begins next month. But in
return, he wants Akhilesh Yadav to find room in the party's list of candidates
for 38 people chosen by him. In the
morning, the list did not include Mulayam Singh's younger brother, Shivpal
Yadav, who represents Jaswantnagar in the UP legislature. Instead, the
constituency was sought for Shivpal Yadav's son, Aditya Yadav. But by the
evening, Mulayam Singh revised his roster to add Shivpal Yadav, who is his
trusted aide and has emerged over the last few months as habitual irritant to
the Chief Minister largely by undermining or challenging his decisions.
The addendum on Shivpal Yadav, 61, could threaten the fragile peace that
Mulayam Singh and the Chief Minister have appeared in the vicinity of in the
last 24 hours. After the Election Commission said last evening that it's
Akhilesh Yadav and not his father who is in charge of the Samajwadi Party based
on the extensive evidence of support among legislators, the Chief Minister
rushed over to Mulayam Singh's home to "seek his blessing" and to telegraph
that he remains a respectful son, a message that could serve him well among
voters and help end the long-running family feud.
More than a month ago, it was Mulayam Singh's choice of candidates that
short-circuited his already-fractious relationship with his son. Aided by
Shivpal Yadav, he declared what he described as the official party list of
contenders for the assembly election. Akhilesh Yadav, in a case of
I'm-so-over-this, then announced a competing list of candidates. Some lucky
party members featured on both lists, but that was about the only good news
that emerged. The weeks that followed saw father and son growing so far
apart that the party appeared ready to split.
On the list presented to Akhilesh Yadav today by Mulayam Singh are several
Samajwadi leaders and ministers seen as old-school loyalists and earlier deemed
unsuitable by the Chief Minister. The younger Yadav said he will consult close
aides now about his father's recommendations.
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