Lucknow: Former Cabinet Minister Swami Prasad Maurya, who created ripples on Tuesday by stopping in the Samajwadi Party, said on Wednesday that he would receive the last telephone on January 14.
Maurya has three rounds of talk with SP Head Akhilesh Yadav.
Asked whether there was a BJP leader who approached him, said Maurya on Wednesday: “No one was contacted.” The source said he was still a BJP main member and is scheduled to take a bond with the party on January 14 before heading to SP SP.
“If they realize the problem of people and do it, they will not face such a situation,” Maurya said.
As soon as he resigned, when Ti asked Maurya how he felt to join SP, he said, “Aafka Prashn Uchit Nahi Hai, is Liye Iska Koi Uttar Nahi Hi (your question is not right so there is no answer to it).” Asked What was wrong with that question, Maurya said: “Humara Antim Nirnay 14 Ko Hoga …
Do Din Tak Play Apne Karyakhonon Aur Samarthakon Se Baat Karunga (I will make a final decision on January 14 …
For the next two days).
I Will talk to my workers and supporters) It was also seen as an attempt to sell his defection to SP and to send messages to his supporters that SP wants it, if not more, rather than the opposite.
While Maurya was uncomfortable at the old turmeric party, the last straw was the leadership of the ‘no’ party on her demands to deploy her son Utkrishhan Maurya from Unchahar.
“The SP head has discussed Maurya’s nomination issue, that his son and political future from his daughter Sanghmitra who is a BJP MP sitting,” said a source who presented the discussion.
Although there was no official statement from BJP, State Minister Siddharth Nath Singh said that Maurya, in five years of office as minister, had never distributed the concerns of the interests of the caste, Dalit, and the ignored youth.
“Those who don’t work and hope things happen at the last minute also understand that they won’t get a ticket.
Therefore he left a party,” Singh said.
Maurya has joined BJP before the 2017 assembly poll after quitting the party Bahujan Samaj while accusing the leadership of running a syndicate by giving a ticket in exchange for money.