OP Rajbhar attacks Akhilesh: Neither Mulayam nor he visited Mathura

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OP Rajbhar attacks Akhilesh: Neither Mulayam nor he visited Mathura

Synopsis

SBSP chief Om Prakash Rajbhar turned the SP's Ayodhya pledge into a Mathura trap — pointing out that neither Mulayam Singh Yadav nor Akhilesh Yadav visited Lord Krishna's birthplace across five combined terms as UP Chief Minister, even as the Yadav family claims descent from Krishna. The exchange reveals how aggressively the BJP bloc is working to neutralise the SP's new religious outreach before the next UP election.

Key Takeaways

Om Prakash Rajbhar on 28 June challenged Akhilesh Yadav to explain why neither he nor his father Mulayam Singh Yadav visited Mathura during their Chief Ministerial tenures.
Akhilesh Yadav had posted on X pledging to develop Ayodhya into a 'peerless sacred city' if the SP returned to power.
CM Yogi Adityanath at a Hathras rally called on the SP to openly support honouring Mathura , Vrindavan , and the birthplace of Lord Krishna .
Rajbhar said the SP 'only wants to remain relevant by passing remarks' and predicted the party would 'run away' from a Mathura temple commitment.
The row highlights intensifying competition over religious identity politics ahead of the next Uttar Pradesh assembly election.

Suheldev Bharatiya Samaj Party (SBSP) chief and Uttar Pradesh minister Om Prakash Rajbhar on Sunday, 28 June launched a sharp attack on Samajwadi Party (SP) president Akhilesh Yadav, questioning why neither Akhilesh nor his father, former Chief Minister Mulayam Singh Yadav, ever visited Mathura during their respective tenures as Chief Minister — even as the SP now claims a devotional connection to Lord Krishna.

What Rajbhar Said

Speaking to reporters, Rajbhar said: 'A Yadav has become Chief Minister four times, and Akhilesh Yadav himself served as Chief Minister once. During those five years, did he ever visit Mathura? He says they are descendants of Lord Krishna.'

Rajbhar went further, invoking Mulayam Singh Yadav directly: 'Neither his father went, nor did he, nor will anyone from his family go. Otherwise, I would say that if you truly are descendants of Lord Krishna, then come with us. We will lead the way, you follow us, and let a temple be built in Mathura. But they will run away.'

He added: 'These people are not here to stay. They only want to remain relevant by passing remarks.'

Adityanath's Criticism at Hathras Rally

Rajbhar's remarks came in direct support of Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath, who earlier on the same day accused the SP of a consistent history of opposing Hindu religious traditions. Speaking at a public gathering in Hathras, Adityanath said: 'Let's talk about Mathura. If you are really trying to call yourself religious, speak openly about Mathura, Vrindavan and the birthplace of Shri Krishna. The birthplace of Shri Krishna should also be honoured.'

Adityanath's remarks came a day after Akhilesh Yadav posted a pledge on social media platform X, promising that an SP government would develop Ayodhya into a 'peerless and inimitable sacred city, where devotees from across the world will experience the unparalleled essence of true spirituality.'

The Ayodhya Trigger

The political flashpoint was Akhilesh Yadav's post on X, in which he committed to transforming Ayodhya if voted to power. The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)-aligned bloc swiftly responded, framing the pledge as opportunistic given the SP's track record on religious sites during its years in power in Uttar Pradesh.

Notably, the SP has governed the state for five terms through the Yadav family, yet critics argue that Mathura and Vrindavan — cities of deep significance to the Yadav community's claimed lineage from Lord Krishna — were not elevated during those years. This is not the first time the BJP and its allies have used the Mathura question to challenge the SP's religious credentials.

Political Context

The exchange underscores the intensifying contest over religious identity politics ahead of the next Uttar Pradesh assembly cycle. Both the BJP and the SP are calibrating their positions on temple towns, with Ayodhya, Mathura, and Varanasi serving as symbolic battlegrounds. Rajbhar's SBSP is a key BJP ally in the state, and his intervention amplifies the ruling coalition's counter-narrative against the SP's recent overtures to Hindu voters.

Whether Akhilesh Yadav responds directly to the Mathura challenge — or pivots back to governance issues — will signal how the SP intends to navigate the religion-versus-development debate in the months ahead.

Point of View

More inclusive SP — but it handed the BJP bloc a ready-made counter: Mathura. The Yadav family's claim of Krishnaite lineage is well-known in UP politics, which makes the absence of any Mathura outreach during five combined Chief Ministerial terms a genuine political liability, not merely a rhetorical jab. Rajbhar's intervention is calculated — as a BJP ally with deep OBC roots, his voice carries weight beyond the party faithful. The deeper question is whether the SP's belated religious pivot can survive this kind of targeted scrutiny, or whether it will be reduced to optics without the track record to back it.
NationPress
28 Jun 2026

Frequently Asked Questions

Why did Om Prakash Rajbhar attack Akhilesh Yadav over Mathura?
Rajbhar attacked Akhilesh Yadav on 28 June after the SP chief pledged on X to develop Ayodhya into a sacred city, arguing that neither Akhilesh nor his father Mulayam Singh Yadav visited Mathura during their combined five terms as Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister, despite the Yadav family claiming descent from Lord Krishna.
What did Akhilesh Yadav say about Ayodhya that triggered the controversy?
Akhilesh Yadav posted on social media platform X that, if voted to power, the SP would develop Ayodhya into a 'peerless and inimitable sacred city' where devotees from across the world could experience 'unparalleled spirituality.' The post drew immediate fire from the BJP bloc.
What did CM Yogi Adityanath say at the Hathras rally?
At a public gathering in Hathras, Adityanath challenged the SP to speak openly about Mathura, Vrindavan, and the birthplace of Lord Krishna if it genuinely wished to project a religious identity. He said the birthplace of Shri Krishna 'should also be honoured.'
Who is Om Prakash Rajbhar and why does his statement matter?
Om Prakash Rajbhar is the chief of the Suheldev Bharatiya Samaj Party (SBSP), a key BJP ally in Uttar Pradesh, and a sitting state minister. His OBC political base and alliance with the ruling coalition give his attacks on the SP added electoral weight beyond standard BJP messaging.
What is the broader political significance of this dispute?
The row is part of a wider contest over religious identity politics ahead of the next Uttar Pradesh assembly election. Ayodhya, Mathura, and Varanasi have become symbolic battlegrounds, and the BJP bloc is using the Mathura question to challenge the credibility of the SP's new religious outreach to Hindu voters.
Nation Press
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