Amlendu Bhushan Khan / New Delhi : BJP president Amit Shah landed in Patna at around 10am and headed straight to the state guest house for the breakfast meeting with Janata Dal(United) chief and key ally Kumar. The two leaders will later meet over dinner hosted by Kumar in the evening and are expected to work out the differences and kick-start the process of formalising the specifics of the electoral understanding.
The Bharatiya Janata Party has assured the JD(U) that it respects its status in Bihar, and sees the chief minister as indispensable to the future of the state.
In recent days the relation between JD ( U ) and BJP are very critical. JDU and BJP leader alleged each other on some national and state related matters. The JD(U), in turn, has conveyed to the BJP it is firmly committed to the alliance, is comfortable in it and wishes to resolve the 2019 seat-sharing issue, on “equal and respectable” terms.
“The meeting between national presidents of two parties will further enhance the harmonious relationship between the two alliance partners. After all, both JD(U) and BJP have a strong bond. When the duo will meet, they will definitely talk on how to win all 40 seats,” BJP’s national spokesperson Shahnawaz Hussain said.
The meeting and the dinner hosted by chief minister Kumar also assumes significance as it comes a fortnight before the first anniversary of the National Democratic Alliance 2 government in Bihar. Kumar’s party formed the government with the BJP after walking out of the grand alliance on July 27, 2017.
Earlier in August 2017, Shah had invited Kumar for a meeting over luncheon when he became part of NDA 2 in Bihar.
Thursday’s dinner hosted by Kumar in honour of Shah comes eight years after he had abruptly cancelled a similar party he had planned to host for the BJP leaders who were in Patna to attend the saffron outfit’s national executive in 2010 leading to bitterness between the two.
Three years later, Kumar walked out of NDA after the BJP made Narendra Modi as its prime ministerial candidate.
Sources in the BJP said that the entry of the JD(U) in the alliance has definitely made the seat sharing a difficult proposition, but leaders sounded optimistic asserting “top leaders will sort out the issue amicably though it involves several meetings among them.”
BJP leaders said that Shah and Kumar’s meeting will help send a strong message to the opposition who are trying to create a rift in the alliance.
“It will be a message of unity,” said a BJP leader.
This is Shah’s first visit to Bihar after NDA 2 government took charge in the state in July 2017.
All the busy thoroughfares of Patna have been flooded with hoardings highlighting the achievements of the Narendra Modi government in the last four years.
Though Shah is unlikely to visit the party office, Mithila painters have depicted the Modi government’s achievement through their paintings on its walls.
Between lunch and dinner with Kumar, the BJP chief will also interact with 10,000 ground level workers, who head the Shakti Kendras or collection of booths in Bihar. The agenda would be to gauge the preparedness for next year’s election and offer guidance.
The state unit of the BJP has set up 10,000 booth in-charges, who have been given responsibility at the panchayat level and in areas under urban local bodies.
Several ground level workers have already arrived in the state capital and have been asked to stay with the representatives of their respective constituencies.
An analysis of the 2014 Lok Sabha elections by ThePrint shows that had the JD(U) allied with the RJD and the Congress, the BJP-led National Democratic Alliance (NDA) would have lost 18 seats in Bihar.
In 2014, the BJP had tied up with the Lok Janshakti Party (LJP) and the Rashtriya Lok Samata Party (RLSP). The alliance nearly swept the state.
Of the 40 Lok Sabha seats in Bihar, the BJP, contesting as the major alliance partner for the first time in 17 years, won 22, the LJP won six seats, while the RLSP secured three – a total of 31 for the alliance.
While getting the LJP and RLSP on board benefited the BJP immensely, there was another significant factor behind the victory — the JD(U) contesting alone.
The spoilsport
The JD(U) performed disastrously in the 2014 elections, managing just two Lok Sabha seats. But its vote share of 16 per cent dented the prospects of the RJD-Congress alliance while helping the BJP’s victory in a number of seats.
In 15 seats, JD(U) candidates secured over one lakh votes. In four of these, the party lost despite securing over 2 lakh votes. Had the JD(U) allied with RJD and the Congress, their combined votes would have ensured the NDA’s defeat in 18 seats.
The BJP has experienced the effect of the JD(U) teaming up with the opposition. In the 2015 assembly elections, when the JD(U) allied with the RJD and the Congress, the BJP was reduced to 55 assembly seats from 91 in the previous election.
The grand alliance formed the government after securing 178 of the total 243 seats in the Bihar assembly. The alliance held power until July 2017, when Nitish broke away to form a government with the BJP.
Senior JD(U) leader K.C, Tyagi says that there is a level of acceptance that his party enjoys across the state. “The good work of Nitish Kumar has reached across sections of Bihar and he has been able to develop a vote bank that is not guided by caste and religion but by the development of the state,” he said. “Anyone who wants the state to grow will choose Nitish and no one else. He has proved it time and again.