BSP Will Surprise Many In Himachal Elections – Mayawati

Shimla: “We are fighting the elections in Himachal with the objective of forming our own government and have no alignment with either BJP or Congress,” said Mayawati.

Speaking at an election rally here, Mayawati said “ given the response our party is receiving in the campaign, the Himachal election will surprise many.”

Making a comparison of the Himachal and Uttar Pradesh governments she said “where as we have not only been giving land but are also building low cost houses for the poor in Uttar Pradesh, the government in Himachal demolished 5000 houses of the poor without making an alternative rehabilitation plan.”

The BSP is working for a more equitable society where the poor and weak are empowered, said Mayawati.

The daily wages in UP have been increased from Rs 58 to Rs 100 and about 15 lakh people had benefited from a government scheme of giving government land to poor people, she claimed.

Going out of the way to distant itself from being called a castist party, the BSP supermo said that it was the opponents propaganda which called BSP an anti ‘Tilak, Traju & Talwar’ party.

“Why would we project Vijay Singh Mankotia, a member from the forward caste, as the chief minister of Himachal if we are an castist party,” she said.

Earlier, Satish Chadra Mishra, a BSP Rajya Sabha member said that the party was not against any religion or caste but was against inequality of any kind and BSP had the best credentials from bringing about an equitable order.

Vijay Singh Mankotia, in his brief speech said that BJP and Congress had driven Himachal into a debt trap. He said that both parties have ruled the state for most of the time by dishing out empty promises.

“BSP had emerged as an alternative and would win atleast 50 percent seats to form the next government, claimed Mankotia.

Promising clean governance, Mankotia said that the earlier government were responsible for the over 15 lakh unemployed people in the state which has an population of just 60 lakhs.

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  1. Private sector in world constitutes the impacts on an Indian economy. It provides employment and incomes to about 90 per cent of the domestic. Where middleclass work in the private sector, Annual per capital income is about $380, below the national mean. More vital, their mode is less than $90. Domestic that involved in the private sector’s financial deeds are among the poorest and have the lowest purchasing power, but they account for 74 per cent of total personal final consumption.

    Contradictory part, domestic that derive sources from the public sector (10 per cent of the total) account for 26 per cent of total individual consumption. The private sector is the gross source of more than 97 per cent of savings and taxes that support investments in public infrastructure and the public sector’s services. If a public sector employee is paid $100, but pays $35 as tax, the net-net receipt is $65 from the private sector.

    It may be states from above that the Indian private sector fuels and hauls the total economy.Prices of gasoline and petroleum product will be reduced when reservation arrives This plays vital role in american share market as per kindly requesting to Bush Administration.It contributes more to the national economy through consumption and taxes than that justified by the income it earns. It is, hence , not amazing that the private sector is not the first choice of more than 98 per cent of employment seekers. The public sector is the first choice.

    The public sector is associated with employment security, a reliable safety and handsome post-retirement benefits. Lifetime incomes and benefits from the public sector overwhelm incomes and benefits that can be earned in the private sector. Employment in the private sector and self-employment are residual opportunities for about 88 per cent of employment seekers. It is surprising that the private sector has been evaluated by the President, Mr K. R. Narayanan, to be such an ideal employer that employment in it could be made available to the socio-economically weak through a process of reservation, even if voluntarily. There is little need to reserve economic space for the socio-economically weak as they are at the core of the private sector.

    The private sector is a dismal ideal that offers scanty incomes, no employment security, no safety nets, and little post-retirement benefits. The public sector is, indeed, India’s ideal employer, and all of it could be reserved for the socio-economically weak. Perhaps, it could be expanded.so the government hold should be there in private sector so that reliability .consistency will be there.

    All my best achievement and dedication foe achieving reservation in private sector is in favour of Dr.Babasaheb Ambedkar.(www.ambedkar.org)
    Your’s faithfully,
    sahasrabudhe Anand Sham.
    E.Mail :[email protected]

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