Rajya Sabha deputy chair poll win cements Nitish-NDA bond

The Opposition alliance had called his exit a mockery of the mandate given by the people.

Update: 2018-08-10 20:16 GMT
The footage aired left social media abuzz with speculations about the next move of the canny Bihar satrap who has made many a turnaround in the last about half decade. (Photo: File)

New Delhi: The position of the deputy chairperson of the Rajya Sabha going to JD(U)’s Harivansh has firmly entrenched Nitish Kumar in the NDA camp. But apparently the JD(U) chief’s decision to adhere to the NDA plan and even field his own candidate came after his bargaining with the Opposition camp, particularly with the RJD, for his return to the “Mahagathbandhan” fold failed. The main point of contention according to sources was Mr Kumar’s refusal to vacate the chief minister’s chair for Tejashwi Yadav of the RJD in exchange for being named as the prime ministerial candidate for the larger Opposition Grand Alliance in 2019 or be accommodated in any “other important” position at the Centre.

Sources told this newspaper that as early as last month, there were a series of meetings between the JD(U), the Rashtriya Janata Dal and the Congress over his possible return to the “Mahagathbandhan”. During these negotiations, the Grand Alliance parties which includes Congress and the RJD, agreed to the demand made by Mr Kumar that he be projected as the prime ministerial face of the larger Opposition alliance ahead of 2019.

However, the key point on which the talks failed was the RJD’s demand that Mr Kumar step down as the Bihar chief minister and hand over the reins to RJD supremo’s son Tejashwi Yadav. The Bihar chief minister wanted to continue in office till the general elections.

Elections to the Bihar Assembly are due in 2020 and Lok Sabha polls are in 2019. Analysts, however, say that these can be clubbed.

Subsequent to the breakdown of the talks, Mr Kumar warmed up to the BJP afresh for a seat-sharing pact and decided to go the full hog by accepting the offer of contesting the deputy chairperson’s post in Rajya Sabha for which the JD(U) chief is said to have canvassed with other parties using his “personal goodwill”.

A BJP candidate would have found it difficult to garner votes from parties like the BJD and the AIADMK which helped them pull off a victory in a House in which they lack majority.

Mr Kumar, who had been elected as the chief minister in Bihar as part of the JD(U)-RJD-Congress Grand Alliance, had exited the same and joined NDA last year citing corruption cases against alliance partner Lalu Prasad.

The Opposition alliance had called his exit a mockery of the mandate given by the people.

Since the breakdown in talks, RJD leader Tejashwi Yadav has been particularly sharp in his attack on Mr Kumar, even going to the extent of terming him a “turncoat”.

Trouble had been brewing between the BJP and the JD(U) over seat-sharing for the Lok Sabha elections. The JD(U) had indicated that it expected the BJP to give it a “respectable” number of seats to contest in 2019. It was also expecting some seats in Jharkhand, Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh and Chhattisgarh to push Mr Kumar’s “Bihar Plus” plan.

In 2014 Lok Sabha polls, the JD(U) had won only two seats compared to the BJP’s 16, LJP’s 5 and RJD’s 3.

However, the JD(U) expects seats in accordance with its performance in the 2015 Assembly polls where it bagged 70 seats in an Assembly of 243 seats.

Tags:    

Similar News