Nitish Kumar Likely To Switch On Sunday, Bihar Parties Go Into Huddle

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Nitish Kumar will be sworn in as Chief Minister of Bihar for a ninth time on Sunday with support from the Bharatiya Janata Party, his on-again-off-again ally, sources Friday.

As the churn in the state’s political landscape spins to a conclusion. For its backing, the BJP will get two Deputy Chief Minister berths, which mirrors the deal after the 2020 election.

Nitish Kumar has called a meeting of the legislative party tomorrow at 10 am, sources said. Large-scale transfer of district magistrates are happening in Bihar, amid reports of an impending change in government.

The Bihar government transferred 22 IAS, 79 IPS, and 45 Bihar Administrative Service (BAS) officers. The transferred officers included five district magistrates (DMs) and 17 SPs.

The Assembly won’t be dissolved, and a poll won’t be held, at this time, sources also said. Bihar will vote next year anyway, so it is understandable neither party is in a rush. The immediate focus will be on the Lok Sabha election in April/May.

Both the BJP and the Nitish’s Janata Dal (United) have summoned, and will huddle with, their respective MPs and MLAs to close the deal, while the Chief Minister Kumar met Governor Rajendra Arlekar this evening, for a tea party hosted on Republic Day every year. Deputy Chief Minister Tejashwi Yadav, whose Rashtriya Janata Dal is part of the government, was absent.

The RJD’s Manoj Jha has called on Nitish Kumar to “clarify” his position – will he stay, or will he go – by the day’s end.

And the party’s National Vice President, Shivanand Tiwari, urged Nitish to step back from the edge. “Yesterday we asked for an appointment but, till now, Nitish ji has not given us time. We do not believe he will make such a mistake again…” he said.

Sources said today that the JDU boss has cancelled all his engagements for January 28, including addressing a public meeting, sparking buzz he is set to reclaim his ‘paltu Kumar’ nickname by reversing his 2022 jump from Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s BJP to the RJd, which itself was a reprisal of his 2017 shuffle of loyalties.

NDTV has been told Nitish Kumar’s return to the BJP-led National Democratic Alliance will follow a detailed game-plan that will begin with the nomination of an Assembly Speaker and include re-shuffling of the cabinet – one ministerial berth for every four MLAs – to accommodate BJP leaders.

Crucially, the terms of Nitish’s ghar wapsi are said to include a reduction in Lok Sabha seats offered to the JDU. In 2019 the party contested 17 and won 16 seats, but will have to settle for 12-15 seats now, given its weakened position – coming off this switch – and the need to accommodate other NDA partners.

Nitish’s BJP re-alignment, though not yet confirmed, gained currency after his former deputy (and close aide), Sushil Kumar Modi’s “in politics, doors are not permanently closed” comment. “Politics is a game of possibilities, anything can happen,” Mr Modi, replaced by Tarkishore Yadav and Renu Devi after the 2020 poll, said. Now a Rajya Sabha MP, he has been a frequent critic of Nitish Kumar since an apparent breakdown in ties, making his ‘open doors’ remark significant.

The BJP ghar wapsi has triggered mixed reactions from Bihar’s political players and, according to a second set of sources, a divide within Nitish Kumar’s party. Lalan Singh, deposed as the JDU boss by Nitish last month, is understood to be against dropping the RJD, while a group led by Sanjay Jha and Ashok Choudhary is pushing for a tie-up with the BJP.

Former Chief Minister Jitan Ram Manjhi and his Hindustan Awam Morcha – for now a JDU ally and part of the state government – are also being courted, with junior Union Home Minister Nityanand Rai tasked with getting that deal done. Mr Manjhi has been cryptic so far, only saying he had predicted Nitish’s jump.

“Therefore, after breaking alliance, he may contest Lok Sabha elections independently or join other alliance…” he said.

The INDIA bloc has not lost hope, at least not publicly. A Bihar Congress leader, Prem Chandra Mishra, told ANI, “I can say with confidence Nitish Kumar will remain with the alliance… (he) has resolved to throw BJP out and we trust him.”

The RJD is also (publicly) optimistic; party spokesperson Shakti Yadav said the tie-up talk reflected a “scared” BJP and Tejashwi Yadav today spoke about the state government fulfilling its promises on employment.

Nitish set the cat among the pigeons Thursday – first snubbing an invitation to join Rahul Gandhi’s ‘Bharat Jodo Nyay Yatra’, and then leaving the Congress-led INDIA bloc on edge by reaching out to the BJP. By the day’s end, he – credited with coaxing the opposition into the unlikely alliance – was closer to re-aligning with the BJP than being able to oust Mr Modi.

Should, as is now most likely, Nitish Kumar re-align with the BJP, there were several factors that would have led to his political fifth flip-flop in 11 years – one that could reshape the state’s political landscape in the BJP’s favour.

Among these are friction with the RJD, amplified by the (now deleted) social media posts by Lalu Yadav’s daughter, Rohini Acharya, and discord within INDIA, where Nitish’s name had been snubbed as both PM candidate and Convenor.

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