The Samajwadi Party should first target to make it a bipolar contest by forging alliances with as many parties as possible. If it fails to come to an agreement with any party, the door for a tacit agreement is always open. Though it is highly unlikely that the BSP will join hands with any of the opposition parties, the SP would need to figure out a way to woo the BSP voters. There aren’t enough reasons to believe that people will vote much differently from the 2019 Lok Sabha elections where 82% Brahmin, 89% Rajput, 70% Vaishya, 91% Jat and 84% other upper caste voted in favour of BJP. At this level of upper caste vote consolidation, a lot needs to be done with very little time in hand. The Samajwadi Party needs to come up with some really lucrative schemes for the state, followed by an outreach campaign that ensures that every single scheme of the party reaches the last person in the state. The party’s presence must be felt both on the ground as well as in media. Its top leadership needs to step out of their comfort rooms and fill the cadre with zeal. The party needs leaders like Shivpal Singh Yadav, known for his aggressive and fearless style of politics. Uttar Pradesh has a rich history of parties getting diminished gradually, starting from Congress, then BSP, and the SP would definitely not want to join the list.