Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar addressing a press conference at the Chief Minister Secretariat, in

Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar on Monday stressed on a grand alliance of opposition parties at the national level to stop the surge of the BJP and urged the Congress and Left parties to take initiative for this.

"The BJP's victory in Uttar Pradesh was mainly because of lack of a Bihar-like mahagathbandhan (grand alliance) there ... If you add the vote percentage of the Samajwadi Party, the Congress and the Bahujan Samaj Party, it is 10 per cent more than the votes polled by the BJP," he told mediapersons here. 

Kumar, who is also the Janata Dal (United) (JD)(U) national president, said, "A Bihar-like grand alliance is the solution to check the surge of the BJP and for this, the Congress and the Left parties should take the initiative."

"A 'mahagathbandhan' like this at the national level will be maha safal (a grand success)," he claimed. Kumar, the architect of the Bihar grand alliance comprising the JD(U), the Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD) and the Congress, said, "Being a bigger party, it is the Congress' responsibility to take the initiative of bringing all major non-BJP parties on one platform."

"I had talks with some Left leaders in this connection and I wish they take an initiative to this effect to throw the BJP-led National Democratic Alliance out of power in the 2019 Lok Sabha polls," he said after his weekly Lok Samvad (public interaction) programme.

Reacting on the outcome of elections in the five states recently, the Bihar chief minister said the BJP was "unnecessarily" jubilating on the outcome of the polls as the results were mixed.

"The Congress emerged victorious in Punjab and as the single largest party in two places (Goa and Manipur). So it is wrong to read that the results are tilted towards the BJP. They (BJP) managed to form government in Goa and Manipur by jor-tor (cobbling numbers)," he said.

On the JD(U), the RJD, the Congress and the Aam Aadmi Party contesting the Delhi civic polls, slated to be held on April 23, separately, Kumar said it is a local body election in which every party has the right to field its candidates.

"MCD (Municipal Corporations of Delhi) elections should not be seen as lack of unity among opposition parties," he said. About doubts expressed about EVM machines by the BSP and the RJD, Kumar said it is an old debate and the Election Commission should solve it.

 

Source: Timesofoman