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BJP, JDU seem to revive relationship

The Bihar ruling coalition partners, Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and Janata Dal-United (JD-U), appear to have put behind them the bitterness that had crept into their ties in the aftermath of the National Democratic Alliance’s (NDA) summary defeat in the recent Lok Sabha elections.

Updated on: Aug 26, 2009 08:54 PM IST
Hindustan Times | By , Patna
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The Bihar ruling coalition partners, Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and Janata Dal-United (JD-U), appear to have put behind them the bitterness that had crept into their ties in the aftermath of the National Democratic Alliance’s (NDA) summary defeat in the recent Lok Sabha elections.

The latest sign of the return of warmth into the relationship between the two NDA allies is the JD-U leadership’s decision to leave the Warisnagar-SC and Chainpur seats to the BJP in the coming assembly by-elections. These seats were in the BJP quota during the last Assembly elections held in October 2005. But the party had lost these seats to Lok Janshakti Party’s (LJP) Maheshwar Hazari Warisnagar) and Rashtriya Janata Dal’s (RJD) Mahabali Singh (Chainpur).

HT Image
HT Image

Earlier this year, both Hazari and Singh had resigned their seats and went on to win the subsequent Lok Sabha poll on JD-U tickets, from Samastipur-SC and Karakat, respectively.

Much to the BJP’s relief, the JD-U did not insist on putting up its own candidates in Warisnagar and Chainpur. Instead, it conceded these seats to the BJP on the ground that they fell in its 2005 Assembly quota.

This was the second clear signal that the BJP was back in favour with the JD-U. The first sign of the thaw in the ties between the parties came last month when BJP’s Tarakant Jha was cleared for council chairmanship.

After dilly-dallying over the issue for months, the JD-U top brass cleared Jha’s name for the top legislative council post even though the JD-U was pretty close to securing a majority in the upper house on its own.

Top BJP leaders now admit that the JD-U was showing a refreshing spirit of accommodation towards its ally that helped put its ties with the BJP on a more even keel.

 
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Rai Atul Krishna

Rai Atul Krishna has been writing, editing and anchoring news reports and features for Hindustan Times on a wide variety of subjects for the past 30 years. He has also mentored many of his colleagues during this period.

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