Campaigning is at its peak in UP but Samajwadi Party (SP) patriarch Mulayam Singh Yadav has stepped out only for two public rallies this elections, a stark contrast to the over 300 rallies he addressed in the 2012 assembly polls.
Leaders from across the political spectrum criss-crossed the entire state to woo the voters but Mulayam mostly kept indoors.
The 77-year-old SP patron campaigned just for his younger daughter-in-law Aparna Yadav, who is contesting on a SP ticket from Lucknow Cantonment, and also for his brother Shivpal Singh Yadav, who is contesting from the party's bastion of Jaswantnagar in Etawah.
Voting for five out the seven phases of Uttar Pradesh Assembly polls is already over.
His political rivals said the SP patriarch's clout has been "confined to just two" of the 403 Assembly seats in the state.
In the 2012 UP Assembly polls, Mulayam had addressed more than 300 rallies.
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In the 2014 Lok Sabha general elections, he limited his appearances to 18 rallies, one in each of the 18 divisions of the state, citing health issues.
Senior BJP leader Hriday Narayan Dikshit, said, "The moment Mulayam Singh Yadav was made the party patron, his power automatically got diluted. And, despite this, if he is getting a chance to campaign for even two assembly seats, he must thank his stars."
Dikshit said both the SP and the BSP are "single-cellular" organisms, in which only one person eventually prevails.
"As far as the SP is concerned, earlier Mulayam Singh Yadav used to prevail, and now it is the turn of Akhilesh," the senior BJP leader said.
"The BSP too is a single-cellular organisation. Congress, which used to be multi-cellular organisation till the time of Gandhi, gradually became single-cellular. The BJP is a multi-cellular organisation, where leaders from different walks of life are involved in elections," he said.
Veteran socialist Raghunandan Singh 'Kaka' feels, "The SP patron has become helpless and virtually hopeless."
He said it is not only the SP workers who are worried and concerned about 'Netaji', people from other parties are also worried about him.
Singh was of the opinion that Akhilesh Yadav has got diverted from the ideals of Lohia, who fought against the Congress throughout his life.
"Akhilesh seems to have lost his way, and is yet to find a way out," Singh said.