The Hindu published the following news today, June 12, perhaps in a bid to please its newfound favourite – the BJP. The latest news from Bihar today is that Nitish Kumar has distanced himself from Narendra Modi. He has threatened to sue whoever that has brought out an advertisement showing Nitish Kumar and Narendra Modi holding each other’s raised hand. Did The Hindu go to town this time without cross checking Neena Vyas’ input? Has The Hindu gone overboard in its bid to forge a BJP-JD(U)-CPI(M) front?
Bihar no longer out of bounds to Modi
Neena Vyas
BJP will signal that it is not just a junior partner in Nitish enterprise
Patna conclave will target Congress also for RJD “misrule”
PATNA: The big show of strength planned by the Bharatiya Janata Party here on Sunday evening will carry a double message: it will mark the start of its all-out election campaign, and signal that the party is not just a “junior” partner in Chief Minister Nitish Kumar's Bihar enterprise.
It may also turn out to be the ‘coming out in Bihar' party for Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi, who has so far been virtually kept out of the election campaign in the State in due deference to the alliance partner, the Janata Dal (United).
The other significant aim of the rally on the historic Gandhi maidan is to send out a clear message that the Congress was equally responsible for the disastrous years of the Rashtriya Janata Dal rule as it was a partner in the coalition government in the last five years before the RJD was swept away.
The BJP seems wary of the sudden upswing in Congress electoral fortunes in Uttar Pradesh on the back of a ‘swing' of Muslim and “upper caste” votes towards it, and hopes to prevent that here by blaming the party equally for the RJD “misrule.”
“The 15 years of RJD rule was propped up by the Congress. It was RJD plus Congress raj,” Deputy Chief Minister Sushil Modi said here on Friday, a day before the start of the BJP's two-day national executive committee meeting, which will end with the rally.
Development is the ‘mantra' the party has adopted and the speakers lined up for the public meetings have apparently been told not to stray from this line. Significantly, Mr. Narendra Modi has been chosen to showcase “development” in Bihar. “Party president Nitin Gadkari, senior leader L.K. Advani and Mr. Narendra Modi will certainly be key speakers at the rally,” Mr. Sushil Modi said. Mr. Kumar had never directly or indirectly interfered in the BJP's internal affairs and the two decades-old alliance was a “model” for coalition governments, he added.
A senior BJP leader said the Gujarat Chief Minister was the “most qualified” as he himself had shown the road to development in his State. Over the last couple of days full-page advertisements have appeared in some local newspapers here on the better status of Muslims in Gujarat than in some regions — the statistics were sourced to the Sachar Committee report.
There would be nothing exceptional in the decision to field Mr. Narendra Modi except that for some days now senior party leaders had hinted that the Gujarat Chief Minister would not be a speaker. For, “normally Chief Ministers of States, other than those where the party conclave takes place, do not address the public meetings.”
A party leader here said the BJP wanted to send out a message to the JD(U) that it was its own master and would take its own decisions. It wants to dispel the impression that in each election the BJP decides to keep Mr. Narendra Modi out of the Bihar campaign for fear of annoying the JD(U).
Mr. Narendra Modi is also to be fielded as the key speaker on the third resolution — on the alleged step-motherly treatment meted out to non-UPA States by the Manmohan Singh government — that the party conclave is expected to adopt.
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