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Will Samajwadi Party support UPA on nuke deal?

Published on Thu, Jul 03, 2008 at 17:47 , Updated at Thu, Jul 03, 2008 at 23:08
Source : CNBC-TV18

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By Bhupendra Chaubey, CNBC-TV18

 

Top leaders of the United National Progressive Alliance, better known as the Third Front, met in the capital to finalise their strategy on the nuclear deal. Choosing to dispel rumours of a split in the UNPA, Samajwadi Party General Secretary Amar Singh said the alliance remained united, but also indicated that an alliance between the Samajwadi Party and the Congress is not ruled out. Meanwhile, the UNPA leaders made it clear that they were not satisfied with the Prime Minister's reply on the nuclear deal.

 

It can be said safely that the Samajwadi Party (SP) will be supporting the UPA government as far as the vote of confidence in the Parliament is concerned. But will the SP give a blanket support to the UPA on the nuclear deal? That is the bigger question that has not yet been answered.

 

The SP is trying to get into a friendly equation with the Congress and they don’t want to give the impression that they are very keen to get into a power sharing agreement with them.

 

Earlier in the day, the SP claimed that they would wish to get all the clarifications that have been offered to them by the PMO and NSA corroborated by an independent, new nuclear scientist - former President APJ Abdul Kalam. He is also someone who belongs to the minority community.

 

SPs gameplan of meeting Kalam is to counter these allegations made by the likes of MK Pandey of the CPM or the UP CM Mayawati who have said that this is a deal that is against minority. So, by meeting Kalam, they have killed two birds with one stone.

 

They have dispelled the notion that since he is a former President, why should he not be thinking in terms of national interest and, this argument that has been leveled that this is an anti-minority deal.

 

Therefore the SP has moved one inch closer to the Congress party even today.

 

The scientific fraternity is simply split down the middle when it comes to the question of deciding whether the nuclear deal is good or bad. Depending on which camp of the nuclear scientists that the SP goes to, it can get a favourable response.

 

What we are witnessing right now is a game of wait and watch from both sides - the Congress as well as the SP. We are talking of an equation that is now turning into a friendly one between two parties who have been at loggerheads with each other for the last 10 years. In 1998, Mulayam Singh Yadav did not allow Sonia Gandhi to become the Prime Minister because of her foreign origins. What has changed now?

 

If the SP gives a blind blanket support to the UPA government at this juncture, it will give an impression that the SP is a power hungry party. That is not the message that Amar Singh and Mulayam Singh wish to convey. That is why they are adopting this wait and watch game for now. But make no mistake about it; they have more or less decided that the Congress has to be bailed out because if it is not then an opportunity is given to the BJP to come to power.

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