With the 2027 Uttar Pradesh Assembly elections approaching, BSP chief Mayawati has begun sharpening the party’s political strategy once again. At a key organisational meeting in Lucknow, the BSP leadership reviewed poll preparedness, cadre mobilisation and caste outreach efforts as the party looks to regain political relevance in the state. The renewed focus has revived discussions around Mayawati’s famous 2007 “social engineering” formula that brought together Dalits, Brahmins, Muslims and sections of non-Yadav OBCs to deliver BSP a historic majority in Uttar Pradesh. While BSP’s electoral strength has declined sharply over the past decade, the party still retains influence among core Jatav voters and sections of Dalit communities.Political analysts believe a stronger BSP could significantly complicate the Samajwadi Party’s strategy ahead of 2027. Akhilesh Yadav has been aggressively pushing the PDA narrative, Pichhda, Dalit, Alpsankhyak, to consolidate backward castes, Dalits and Muslims against the BJP. However, BSP’s revival could split this social coalition by reclaiming Dalit voters and attracting sections of Muslim voters in triangular contests. The possibility of BSP reopening its Brahmin outreach programmes has also added a new layer to Uttar Pradesh’s caste arithmetic. Even a limited shift in upper-caste support in select constituencies could alter electoral equations and hurt the opposition more than the BJP. As Uttar Pradesh moves closer to the 2027 battle, the key question is no longer whether BSP can independently return to power, but whether Mayawati can once again reshape the state’s political contest through caste consolidation and strategic social engineering.