It was Chandra Shekharji who encouraged me to join politics after I decided to leave the IAS in 1984. I was deeply impressed by Jayaprakash Narayan and it was in a way natural for me to join the Janata Party, of which Chandra Shekharji was president then. He gave me all support and encouragement after I joined the party. In 1984, I contested as a Janata candidate in Hazaribagh, but fared very badly. Chandra Shekharji himself lost the Ballia seat. That was an occasion when I saw his indomitable spirit in full play. When everything appeared lost, he did not lose heart.
After the election debacle, he decided to go around the country, meeting up with Janata party workers and others. I accompanied him, taking notes of the conversations and speeches. At the end of it, I prepared a report for the national executive of the party in the summer of 1985. In 1986, he made me general secretary of the party and in 1988 nominated me to Rajya Sabha from Bihar.
Some misunderstandings developed between Chandra Sheskharji and V P Singh, even as the country’s politics was taking a major turn. But we managed to tackle it to everyone’s satisfaction and the Janata Dal was formed. The merger of the parties was smooth and Chandra Shekharji worked very hard, with his heart and soul, for the victory of the party in the 1989 Lok Sabha elections. But the events following the elections, leading to the election of V P Singh as Prime Minister, left a scar on him. He thought the party did not treat him properly. Chandra Shekharji never carried the bitterness of a political fight for long. He patched up with V P Singh and despite the clashes with Indira Gandhi still maintained a warmth with her.
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