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Its advantage BJP in Bihar but Nitish can't afford to loose

It is Nitish Kumar who should be biting his fingernails. This is a battle he cannot afford to lose, but even if he wins, he will confront the nightmare of ruling with Lalu Yadav holding the reins from the backseat.

September 15, 2015 / 17:30 IST
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R JagannathanFirstpost.com

The countdown for the Bihar assembly polls may have officially begun last week when the Election Commission announced the polling dates, but the real countdown began in February, when Arvind Kejriwal won the Delhi elections, handing the BJP its first, stinging defeat since May 2014.The reason why the pandits started the countdown earlier will never be stated honestly: most of them were anti-Narendra Modi, and the Delhi defeat gave them hope that he could be defeated. This is why they have been billing every subsequent election as something to do with Modi. Wins were credited to other factors (as the BJP's local election wins in Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan were despite Lalitgate and Vyapam), and the losses to Modi (Delhi, Kolkata Municipal Corporation).
Delhi made Bihar relevant. This is why within days of Kejriwal's crowning, Nitish Kumar toppled his own handpicked successor Jitan Ram Manjhi and seized the crown for himself.

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Thus, if the Bihar election is a test case for anyone, it is not Modi, but Nitish Kumar. Whatever be the result, Modi's central government will continue to remain powerful; it is Kumar who faces the possibility of political oblivion if he loses, and the challenge of running a messy coalition government if he wins. Just as a three-legged race is not meant for pace or performance, Kumar will be permanently hobbled by Lalu Yadav. His victory - however remote the possibility - will be pyrrhic at best.

For the BJP, on the other hand, the Bihar polls hold huge promise, win or lose. Reason: for the first time ever it has been able to cobble together an effective coalition of the upper castes, some OBCs and Dalits, enabling it to test the viability of this combo in national politics. While Muslims and Yadavs will be difficult to snare in this election, the rest of the communities could well swing the BJP's way this time. If the BJP wins this time, even Yadavland will not remain closed to it.