In little over a year, Maurya has once again propelled himself as a major provocateur in the politics of Uttar Pradesh. The last time he occupied this space was in January 2022, weeks before the state – the country’s politically most important one – voted in the Assembly election. Back then, he had dramatically resigned from the post of a cabinet minister in UP, accusing the Yogi Adityanath-led Bharatiya Janata Party government of neglecting Dalits, OBCs, farmers and the youth. Several other BJP MLAs followed the OBC leader as they quit the saffron party and joined the main Opposition party, SP. With Maurya in his ranks, SP president Akhilesh Yadav’s campaign to woo the numerically superior backward caste voters, especially the non-Yadav communities, received a fillip. Maurya took the BJP’s communal mobilization of ‘80vs20’ (Hindus vs Muslims) head-on with the ‘85vs15’ clarion of social justice Bahujan politics. Theoretically, the BJP’s communal polarisation narrative was met with Maurya spearheading the call for uniting the OBCs, Dalits and tribals, along with Muslims against the upper caste Hindus, who form the ideological core of the BJP and its fountainhead the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh. To cut the story short, despite a spirited fight, the SP and its allies could not prevent the BJP from returning to power. Maurya himself suffered a jolt as he lost his own election from Fazilnagar in Kushinagar and had to make do with an indirect route to the Assembly as an MLC.