Uttar Pradesh is witnessing an unusual political spectacle that blends Bollywood nicknames, underworld slang, and electoral strategy into a bizarre poster campaign ahead of the 2027 elections.
The ‘Dhurandhar CM’ versus ‘Lyari Raj’ messaging has taken over walls and social media across multiple UP cities, leaving ordinary citizens puzzled about what these cryptic terms actually mean. Political observers suggest these are coded references to different power structures — one pointing to a particular political camp’s approach to governance, the other invoking an alternate power center’s influence.
When Politics Borrows From Cinema and the Streets
The use of Bollywood-style names and underworld terminology in political campaigns isn’t entirely new in Indian politics, but the scale and coordination of this particular poster blitz suggests something more organized. These posters appear simultaneously across different districts, indicating backing from well-resourced political groups preparing ground for 2027.
Local analysts point out that such campaigns often serve a dual purpose — they test public sentiment while simultaneously creating coded communication networks within political organizations. What looks cryptic to the average voter might carry specific meaning for party workers on the ground.
The Bollywood angle adds another layer. By using entertainment industry references, political groups tap into cultural vocabulary that resonates with younger voters while maintaining plausible deniability about the messages’ actual meanings.
What This Reveals About UP’s Political Climate
The emergence of these campaigns three years before state elections indicates that major political players are already mobilizing resources and testing messaging strategies. UP’s fractious political landscape — with multiple power centers competing for influence — makes such campaigns inevitable.
The invocation of ‘Lyari Raj’ (reference to organized crime networks) alongside electoral symbolism is particularly telling. It suggests that conversations about the relationship between formal politics and informal power structures remain central to UP’s political discourse, even if they’re expressed through coded language.
Citizens across cities have reported finding these posters on commercial areas, residential colonies, and transport hubs. The messaging appears designed to go viral organically while maintaining enough ambiguity to avoid direct legal challenges.
Political experts warn that such campaigns can pollute the electoral environment by normalizing underworld references in mainstream politics. When voters see these posters, they receive subtle messaging that informal power structures have legitimate political roles.
As 2027 approaches, UP will likely see escalating poster wars with increasingly creative — and increasingly problematic — messaging. What happens in the coming months will set the tone for how openly political campaigns in India’s most populous state blend entertainment, crime, and electoral ambition.
