Keshav Pd Maurya, the deputy CM rewarded for BJP win in UP

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Press Trust of India Lucknow
Last Updated : Mar 18 2017 | 8:48 PM IST
Keshav Prasad Maurya, named as one of the two deputy chief ministers of Uttar Pradesh today, was rewarded for working tirelessly to galvanise support for the BJP on the ground, becoming the OBC face of the party in the state.
Representing Phulpur in the Lok Sabha, Maurya, 47, has seen his career graph rise steadily in the party. He was said to be one of the top contenders for the chief ministership after the landslide victory secured by the party in the state.
Associated with the RSS and the VHP from an early age, Maurya's life bears an uncanny similarity to that of Prime Minister Narendra Modi. Both, as young men from poor families, helped their fathers sell tea.
After becoming the first time MLA in UP Assembly in 2012, he was made UP BJP chief in 2016 and had a role in the BJP securing three-fourth majority.
Born in a farmer's home in Kaushambi district of UP, Maurya spent his childhood in poverty. Like Modi, Maurya also worked at tea-stalls and sold newspapers to support his family and continue education.
Maurya, too, takes pride in his childhood compulsion of serving tea to customers.
He considers it as a common thread that binds him with the prime minister.
The member's page on the website of Lok Sabha says that Keshav Prasad Maurya "got inspiration for doing social service as well as education during childhood while selling tea."
As a minor, Maurya joined Baal Swayam Sevak of RSS. Later, he was associated with the Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP) and Bajrang Dal.
During his 12-year association with the VHP and Bajrang Dal, Maurya was considered close to VHP patron Ashok Singhal.
Known for his fiery speeches, he went to jail during Ayodhya and Gau Raksha (Save Cow) movements.
Maurya was elected to UP Assembly in 2012 from Sirathu seat in Allahabad. In 2014, he contested from Phulpur- best known for having been the constituency of first prime minister Jawaharlal Nehru.
The BJP had got considerable support from non-Yadav OBCs and non-Jatav Dalits in UP during the Lok Sabha elections.
The voting pattern prompted the BJP to replace the architect of UP miracle for BJP, Lakshmikant Vajpayee with Maurya, who belongs to an OBC sub-caste.
Maurya went about consolidating the support base among non-Yadav OBC caste categories. He appointed BJP leaders belonging to Kushwaha, Koeri, Kurmi, Shakya, Patel and others as district unit chiefs across Uttar Pradesh.
Maurya is the only BJP leader after former UP chief minister and present Governor of Rajasthan Kalyan Singh who wields considerable support among OBCs and Dalits.

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First Published: Mar 18 2017 | 8:48 PM IST

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