CM Yogi Targets SP Over Extortion, Janmashtami Ban Claims
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath on Tuesday, 30 June 2026, launched a sharp attack on the Samajwadi Party, alleging that the previous SP government in Uttar Pradesh allowed extortion by party leaders and went so far as to ban celebrations of Shri Krishna Janmashtami, one of Hinduism's most significant festivals.
Context
CM Yogi posted on X in Hindi, stating: 'Koi sarkari vigyapan nikalta tha toh chacha-bhaanje ki jodi vasuli ke liye nikal padti thi' — roughly translated, 'Whenever a government advertisement was issued, the uncle-nephew duo would set out to collect their cut.' The remark is a pointed reference to the SP's top leadership, widely understood in Uttar Pradesh politics as an allusion to the party's founding family. He further alleged that under the SP government, Shri Krishna Janmashtami programmes were banned, calling it an insult to cultural and religious heritage.
The post, which also included a video, appears to be part of a broader political offensive by the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) in the state ahead of ongoing political mobilisation ahead of the next assembly cycle.
Policy Backdrop
The 'chacha-bhaanje' ('uncle-nephew') phrase has long been used in Uttar Pradesh political discourse to describe the relationship between senior Samajwadi Party figures, particularly in the context of allegations of nepotism and rent-seeking during SP tenures in government. Accusations of extortion linked to government contracts and advertisements were a recurring theme in BJP's campaign messaging during the 2017 and 2022 Uttar Pradesh assembly elections.
The allegation regarding Janmashtami restrictions touches on a sensitive fault line in UP politics: the question of whether minority-appeasement politics led SP-era administrations to curtail Hindu religious public gatherings. CM Yogi and the BJP have consistently positioned themselves as restorers of cultural and religious freedom in the state since coming to power in 2017.
Stakeholders and Impact
The primary target of the remarks is the Samajwadi Party and its leadership. The SP has not yet issued a formal response to this specific post. For the BJP, such messaging reinforces two parallel narratives: administrative corruption under SP rule, and the party's credentials as a defender of Hindu religious practice.
Voters in Mathura, Vrindavan, and across the Braj region — where Janmashtami holds deep cultural significance — are a key audience for the second allegation. The extortion charge, meanwhile, speaks to a broader constituency of traders, contractors, and small businesses who interacted with state government processes during earlier SP tenures.
What's Next
The post signals that the BJP in Uttar Pradesh intends to keep the SP's governance record under sustained public scrutiny. As CM Yogi Adityanath consolidates his position at the Gorakhnath Math and within state politics, such targeted attacks on the opposition's legacy are likely to intensify, particularly around religiously significant dates on the calendar. The Samajwadi Party's response — and whether it chooses to engage or ignore these charges — will shape the next phase of the political conversation in Uttar Pradesh.