[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text]In just about a fortnight since JD(U) president Nitish Kumar took his party out of the grand alliance in Bihar to join hands with BJP and stay on as chief minister, he is face to face with a revolt by the senior most party leader Sharad Yadav, pushing the party to the edge of a split.
Yadav has openly criticised Nitish Kumar’s move as betrayal of 11 crore people and of the mandate given to the ‘mahagathbandhan’ (grand alliance). Today he began a three-day tour of Bihar, saying he would connect with people to gauge their mood.
He launched a sharp attack on Nitish Kumar, as if daring him to take action against him. He said there are two Janata Dals. “People of the sarkari (official) Janata Dal have become the Chief Minister and Ministers in Patna and then there is the real Janata Dal among the masses,” Sharad Yadav said at the first stop of his Bahujan Chaupal yatra in Sonepur, reported NDTV. He also hit out at Nitish Kumar over his decision to dissolve the grand alliance with Lalu Yadav and the Congress and join hands anew with the BJP. While no JD (U) leader was present, the local legislator, Ramanuj Prasad of Lalu Yadav’s RJD was there.
Yadav is on a three-day visit to eight districts in Bihar including Patna, Muzaffarpur, Samastipur, Supaul and Madhepura.
The JD(U) has distanced itself from Sharad Yadav’s tour. Though many supporters turned up at the airport to greet Sharad Yadav, there was no prominent JD(U) leader or MLA. His most ardent supporters like Vijendra Yadav or KC Tyagi are now loath to speak in his support. JD(U) state chief Vashisht Narain Singh called Yadav’s move a “personal initiative”. He said, “The JD-U has nothing to do with it.”
“The path that Sharad Yadav has chosen leads to the RJD,” said KC Tyagi, pointing out that Yadav has not once commented on the corruption charges against Lalu Yadav and his family that led Nitish Kumar to end their alliance. “Sharad Yadav has constantly been questioning Nitish Kumar’s decision, but hasn’t once commented on the investigation against Lalu Yadav’s son Tejashwi,” Tyagi said, warning, “If he crosses the line, it will be unfortunate.”
Yadav has declared his intent to participate this month in a rally organised by the JD(U)’s ex-partner Lalu Yadav, where opposition parties will converge on an anti-BJP plank. The JD(U) is clear that such an act will lay the basis of action against the former party chief but it will not oblige Yadav with the expulsion that he wants. Nitish Kumar, they said, is likely to suspend Yadav in an attempt to checkmate him.
Sharad Yadav wants to be expelled from the JD(U) because that will mean he does not lose his Rajya Sabha membership, which will happen if he resigns. But a suspension from the party will mean that Sharad Yadav will be disqualified if he does not follow formal party orders or whips to support the BJP-led government in Parliament.
Meanwhile, he will lose privileges that he gets as the party’s leader in the upper house: his front row seat, the time allotted to speak and the liberty to intervene.
But this would not prevent Yadav from getting back to Rajya Sabha from some other state with some other party’s support in the next round of elections to the upper house. And, as the Gujarat JD(U) MLA Chhotubhai Vasava’s vote revealed, there are many others in JD(U) apart from Yadav who are unhappy with Nitish Kumar’s “unilateral decision” without consulting them. A break in the party would increase Kumar’s dependence on BJP, with all its allied consequences for him.[/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row]