Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Mayawati today tendered her resignation to Governor B L Joshi after facing a rout in the assembly elections.
The chief minister, apparently to avoid waiting news persons, chose to arrive from the back door of the Raj Bhawan.
Mayawati's BSP faced a rout in the assembly elections managing to win only 80 seats. Her party had won 206 seats in the 2007 assembly elections.
Accusing Congress and BJP of raising the minority sub-quota issue mid-way during the UP polls for their political gains, BSP supremo Mayawati today said this helped in large-scale transfer of Muslim votes to Samajwadi Party.
Talking to reporters soon after submitting her resignation to UP Governor B L Joshi, Mayawati said 70% of the Muslim votes had gone to the SP due to the minority reservation issue.
"You all know that Congress raised the issue of reservation for backward Muslims for their political gains soon after the Vidhan Sabha elections were declared and this was opposed strongly to by the BJP," Mayawati said.
She alleged that the BJP also tried to attract the upper castes and the OBCs towards them for electoral benefits.
"Due to this, there was a fear in the Muslim community that the BJP may come to power. Finding the Congress weak and thinking that the OBCs and upper castes would vote for the BJP, Muslims voted not for the Congress but the SP," Mayawati claimed.
She said there were apprehensions in the minds of Muslims that the upper castes and OBCs would not vote for the BSP and, hence, they voted for the SP.
Except the Dalits, the Hindu votes-particularly those of upper castes-got divided among many parties and the SP gained from this, she said.
"70% of the Muslim votes were transferred to the SP," Mayawati said.
Mayawati claimed that the Dalit votes did not get divided and remained with the BSP.
"All across the state, the Dalits have voted for the BSP. This is the reason the BSP is number 2. Otherwise, it would have been left far behind.... My position would have been like that of Lalu [Prasad] in Bihar," she said.
The out-going chief minister alleged that the new SP government will put her welfare programmes in cold storage and take the state backwards by many years.
"Very soon the people of the state will get fed up with the functioning of the SP government and remember the good governance during the BSP rule," she said.
Enumerating the various welfare schemes of her government, she alleged that the Centre's attitude towards the state during her rule was negative.
Mayawati indicated that she would work towards reviving her party in the coming days.
"Our party will revive its cadre and work on taking the state out of the Hindu-Muslim mindset," she said, adding that the BSP would also woo other communities into the party-fold.
The BSP chief also hit out at the media for keeping the minority sub-quote issue alive by highlighting the issue repeatedly during the polls.