BIHAR CHIEF MINISTER NITHISH KUMAR RESIGNED DAY AFTER
POLL DEFEAT
Taking a dig at Mr
Modi, he said, "We hope that good days have come. Promises will be
fulfilled."But Mr Kumar's decision to resign was dismissed as a
"drama" by the BJP, his main political rival. "Tomorrow MLAs
will again re-elect Nkumar as their
leader & he will withdraw his resignation claiming under pressure of
MLa's (sic)," tweeted senior BJP leader and former deputy chief minister
Sushil Kumar Modi, who arrived in the capital this afternoon, only to rush back
to Patna soon after. JD(U) chief Sharad Yadav himself lent credence to the BJP
charge. "A new CM candidate will be decided tomorrow. A new government
will be formed in Bihar and it will be of JD(U)," he said. (Nitish Kumar
is Fond of Resigning: Sushil Kumar Modi)But sources close to Mr Kumar say he is
not keen to be re-elected as he does not want his decision to be seen as a
political stunt.Nitish Kumar was running a precariously-perched government ever
since he snapped his party's 17-year-old ties with the BJP and several senior
members of his party left before the election. There was speculation the
dissent within his party would grow, with support from the opposition.Yesterday,
six ministers who had been critical of his decision to part ways with the BJP
last year did not attend a cabinet meeting that Mr Kumar had called.In an
Assembly with an effective strength of 238, the JD(U) has 114 members and has
been propped up by the support of four Congress members, three Independents and
a CPI legislator. The actual strength of
the assembly is 243.On Friday, state BJP leader Sushil Kumar Modi, his former
deputy, said, "Nitish Kumar should take moral responsibility and resign.
He has lost the confidence of the people."
While many see Mr
Kumar's decision to split with the BJP over Mr Modi's elevation his biggest
mistake, he insisted today, "The decision was based on principles. Whoever
takes an ideological position is ridiculed."The Bihar chief minister is
among those who fault the BJP leader for not tdoing enough to stop the 2002
riots on his watch in Gujarat(Possible Scenarios in Bihar After Nitish Kumar's
Resignation)
Prof. John Kurakar
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