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Was it a coincidence that barely a day after Nitish Kumar said that the BJP leaders should get the charges against Lalu’s land deals probed by an appropriate investigating agency, the Income Tax authorities swooped down at RJD chief’s house in Delhi and Haryana?
While the political grapevine in Bihar was agog with rumours that Nitish may have given his clandestine approval for this action, and may be planning to shift his allegiance to his former alliance partner NDA, the fact remains that nothing of such political upheaval is in the offing here.
The reasons are one too many. Ever since the Grand Alliance stormed to power in November 2015, the BJP and the news-starved media (particularly the electronic channels) have been trying to sow the seeds of discontent between Nitish and Lalu Prasad, the two major allies in the Grand Alliance (in which Congress is also a junior partner).
Last week, it was the Supreme Court ruling in the fodder scam which spelt further trouble for Lalu. On Tuesday, it’s the Income Tax raids on Lalu and his aides’ premises to probe how he and his family, as alleged by BJP leader Sushil Kumar Modi, amassed huge immoveable property in the last one decade.
The JD(U) too scotched speculations that such raids would drive a wedge between two alliance partners Nitish and Lalu, which, in turn, could lead to the downfall of the Nitish Government.
The Nitish regime in Bihar has the support of the single largest party RJD (80 MLAs), JD(U) (71) and Congress (27). The BJP has 53 legislators, while its alliance partner LJP (2), RLSP (2) and HAM (1) have poor representation in the 243-member Assembly.
Veteran Socialist leader Shivanand Tiwary, who was one of the petitioners in the fodder scam in mid-90’s, and had once been a JD(U) Rajya Sabha member before switching over his allegiance to Lalu, says:
While some may argue that Nitish has not been seen defending Lalu of late, but it’s equally true that Nitish needs Lalu’s support as much as Lalu needs the JD(U)’s crutches. After all, the RJD chief has to firmly establish his two sons (with the younger one Tejaswi his heir apparent).
Nitish, who was the dominant partner while in alliance with the BJP, has remained Chief Minister for more than a decade, either due to BJP’s vote base or Lalu’s mass base, is unlikely to dump Lalu midway. Precisely because it was Lalu who helped him in 2015 romp home in a decisive battle against his arch-rival Narendra Modi.
(The author is a Bihar-based journalist)
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