The Asian Age

Nitish caught in a fix

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Since the defeat in March of NDA partners JD( U) and BJP in byelection­s for the Araria Lok Sabha and Jehanabad Assembly seats in Bihar, both at the hands of Lalu Yadav’s RJD, much political uncertaint­y has come to hang over the state. Sangh Parivar cohorts, including prominent Bihar BJP leaders and Union Cabinet ministers, made highly provocativ­e remarks and full- scale communal riots erupted across several districts of the state following Ram Navami procession­s taken out by RSS- linked elements. The police failed comprehens­ively. With it sank Mr Kumar’s reputation of maintainin­g law and order.

Mr Kumar’s JD( U) won the Bihar Assembly polls in the company of the RJD. Last July, the CM opportunis­tically ditched the RJD and invited the BJP to join his government. In return, however, the CM’s party wasn’t given any Central portfolios. So there was dissent brewing in the JD( U).

But it’s after the communal riots that the CM’s panic became evident. Communal violence helps the BJP polarise Hindu votes but hurts the JD( U), which has posed for many years as wedded to communal harmony.

The CM has lately been saying that he “will not compromise on the issue of social harmony”. This is seen as some kind of implied threat to the BJP. But the JD( U) is in no position to threaten the BJP as the next Lok Sabha election nears.

The CM is crying on the shoulders of another Bihar NDA partner, Union minister Ram Vilas Paswan, who is also uncomforta­ble with the BJP’s aggressive communalis­m. But just the two together carry very little political weight in Bihar.

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