A multi-party Grand Alliance took shape ahead of the Bihar assembly polls on Saturday, notwithstanding a minor fissure, with Rashtriya Janata Dal’s Tejashwi Yadav being backed unanimously as the face of the coalition and the party ending up with a lion’s share of the seats.
IMAGE: RJD leaders Tejaswi Yadav and Tej Pratap raise hands with Bihar Congress incharge Avinash Pandey, VIP party chief Mukesh Sahni and Left party leaders during the Grand Alliance’s press conference ahead of Bihar Assembly elections, in Patna. Photograph: PTI Photo
Announcing the seat-sharing formula in presence of leaders of Congress, Communist Party of India-Marxist-Leninist, Communist Party of India and Communist Party of India-Marxist, Yadav said his party will accommodate old alliance partner Vikashheel Insaan Party and Jharkhand Mukti Morcha its ally in adjoining Jharkhand from its quota of 144 seats in the 243-strong assembly.
Among other allies, Congress has been given 70 seats, nearly twice as many as it had contested in the 2015 assembly polls in alliance with the RJD and Chief Minister Nitish Kumar’s Janata Dal-United.
The Congress will also be fielding its candidate in Valmiki Nagar Lok Sabha seat where by-poll will be held on November 07.
Among the Left parties, the CPI-ML has been given 19 seats, followed by CPI (six) and CPI-M.
Yadav vowed to dislodge the government headed by Nitish Kumar, whom Congress leader Avinash Pandey in his address accused of “apharan” (hijacking) of the mandate in the previous elections.
The JD-U chief had fought 2015 elections opposing the Bharatiya Janata Party led by Prime Minister Narendra Modi but ended up re-aligning with the saffron party, Pandey said.
The disjointed formation, however, continued to be in disarray as VIP president Mukesh Sahni, a Bollywood set designer-turned-politician announced soon after the press conference that he was quitting the grand alliance since he did not get “a respectable offer”.