Nitish may ditch 'Mahagathbandhan', realign with BJP, claims Prashant Kishor
The Hindu
Mr. Kishor attacked the Bihar CM for letting party MP Harivansh continue as the Rajya Sabha deputy chairman.
Political strategist-turned-activist Prashant Kishor on Thursday took a fresh jibe at Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar, his former mentor, reiterating that the latter may ditch the 'Mahagathbandhan' and return to the BJP-led NDA.
Mr. Kishor, who had on the previous day claimed that Mr. Kumar could do yet another volte-face and return to the NDA, attacked the JD(U) de facto leader for letting party MP Harivansh continue as the Rajya Sabha deputy chairman.
The election strategist had also told PTI on Wednesday that Mr. Kumar has kept a line of communication open with the BJP through Mr. Harivansh.
"After having snapped ties with the BJP, Nitish Kumar should have asked Harivansh to step down. If he insisted on occupying the post, he could have been expelled from the JD(U). But Nitish is having this arrangement to keep options open for the future," Mr. Kishor alleged at a public meeting in West Champaran district, where he has been for three weeks as part of a State-wide 'padayatra', after which he is expected to float a political party.
Mr. Kishor, who seems to have a love-hate relationship with Mr. Kumar, added on Thursday that the Bihar CM "sought votes in the name of defeating BJP in 2015 Assembly polls, but cheated the public to realign two years later. He is pretending to be at war with BJP again. But he may again do a turnaround".
"And this man has the temerity to call me a stooge of the BJP," fumed the celebrated political strategist, asking with rhetorical flourish "who had gone to assist Mamata Banerjee in defeating BJP in the assembly polls last year? Was it Nitish, Lalu or Tejashwi?" Mr. Kishor, who has handled many a successful election campaign of leaders as diverse as Narendra Modi, Jagan Mohan Reddy and Captain Amarinder Singh, had announced his retirement from political consultancy after the West Bengal polls last year.
"Had we not beaten BJP in West Bengal, NRC would have been clamped on the country and there would have been long queues of people filling up forms," said Mr. Kishor who was expelled from the JD(U) following differences with Nitish Kumar, then the party president, over the Citizenship Amendment Act.