In Ayodhya, opposition voices grew louder after SP chief Akhilesh Yadav blasted Uttar Pradesh’s Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath – calling him an “infiltrator” and saying he should return to Uttarakhand. SP MP Awadhesh Prasad echoed Yadav’s criticism, telling reporters that Yogi’s rule has made the state’s situation worse and eroded his credibility. He accused the BJP of widening public suffering and said that both the central government of Prime Minister Narendra Modi and state governments like Uttar Pradesh now lift the country’s problems, especially for young people who hold degrees but face job scarcity and rising suicides. Prasad linked these issues to a broader “RSS ideology” that, he claimed, erodes reservation guarantees and eliminates government jobs through privatization.
In Bihar, the opposition’s anger shifted to its own coalition. HAM leader Jitan Ram Manjhi said he was satisfied with the NDA’s seat‑sharing plan for the upcoming state assembly election, even though his party received only six seats—the far less than the 40 he originally demanded and the 15 he later lowered his request to. Manjhi compared the deal to past experiences in the Lok Sabha elections, where he “expected two Lok Sabha seats and one Rajya Sabha seat but received only one.” He noted that the political process in Bihar is set to unseat the BJP government, a shift that will reshape the state’s political landscape.
These comments come days after the ruling NDA alliance announced its seat‑sharing arrangement for Bihar’s 243‑member assembly, highlighting the growing frustration among opposition parties over perceived inequitable allocations and the broader challenges facing Uttar Pradesh’s youth, employment, and governance.
Source: ianslive
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