Meanwhile, the nomination of independent candidate Mahesh Chandra Sharma was rejected today during scrutiny.
The BSP, with 19 MLAs in the 403-member Assembly, is already short of 18 first preference votes and with Agarwal's son Nitin likely to vote for the BJP, the task will be all the more difficult for Mayawati's candidate Bhimrao Ambedkar.
In order to ensure a straight win in the Rajya Sabha elections from the state, a candidate has to get 37 first preference votes.
"The character of the BJP has been to indulge in horse trading, and in order to flaunt the clout of the BJP government in the ongoing Rajya Sabha elections, the ruling party has put up additional candidates to widen the gulf between the SP and BSP," SP MLC and spokesperson Sunil Singh Sajan told PTI.
The SP and the BSP have reached an electoral understanding to back the candidate who is most capable of defeating the BJP.
UP BJP vice president JPS Rathore told PTI that the party was giving finishing touches to its strategy for the elections and the picture will be clear on March 15, the last day for withdrawal of candidature.
Three additional candidates of the BJP and an indepenent jumped into the fray at the last moment. With the rejection of the independent candidate's nomination, 13 aspirants are left in the fray for 10 seats. The Samajwadi Party and BSP have fielded Jaya Bachchan and Bhimrao Ambedkar respectively.
The Samajwadi Party has 47 MLAs in the House, and can transfer 10 surplus votes to the BSP, which has declared its support to the SP candidates in the bypolls for Gorakhpur and Phulpur Lok Sabha seats vacated by Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath and his deputy Keshav Prasad Maurya.
The seven votes of the Congress and one of RLD can help the BSP candidate reach the magic figure of 37 votes. In that scenario, the vote of Nitin Agarwal, the son of Naresh Agarwal, will be crucial.
During the 2012 biennial elections to the Rajya Sabha, the then ruling SP had bagged six seats.
Like in Uttar Pradesh, where the BJP hopes to gain from dissension in rival parties, it has fielded extra candidates in Maharashtra and Gujarat. In Maharashtra, where it can win three seats, it has put up four candidates, and in Gujarat, where the party can easily bag two, it has fielded three nominees.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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