Yechury said that the two parties BSP and SP who were giving outside support to UPA government do not seem to favour early elections in the country.
"Unless both BSP and SP withdraw their support to the UPA, snap polls won't take place. After all, democracy is a number game," he remarked.
Talking to reporters here, Yechury, however, said that a non-Congress and non-BJP third alternative front was emerging and it would be committed to implementing alternative policies and not just to forming an alternative government only.
"It is a matter of policies, not just of forming a government," he quipped.
Lashing out at Mamata Banerjee-led TMC for its timing of raising the hue and cry against current policies of the Union Government, Yechury asked why her party did not oppose tooth and nail the fuel price hike and FDI in retail when it was very much part of the UPA.
"TMC ministers in the UPA were very much present in the meeting of the Cabinet when these anti-people decisions were taken. Why did they keep mum then," he asked.
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"Actually, the TMC was having West Bengal's coming panchayat polls on its agenda and did not want to go to the electorates with the burden of fuel price hike and the FDI," he remarked.
When asked if CPM General Secretary Parkash Karat, by asking SP supremo Mulayam Singh Yadav to play a leading role inside and outside Parliament, had indicated that Yadav could be projected as Prime ministerial candidate of the third front when it takes shape, Yechury replied "it is too early to say anything over the matter."
However, he added in a lighter vein, that "Mulayam Singhji has been a Prime ministerial candidate since 1990s".