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Discontent in Bihar BJP too
Suman K Jha Posted online: Sunday, April 27, 2008 at 2332 hrs IST NEW DELHi, APRIL 26 Modi, perceived to be “too close” to Chief Minister Nitish Kumar by his detractors, spent most of Friday in town, meeting LK Advani and Rajnath Singh. “I have nothing more to add to what the prabhari (in-charge) has already said in Patna,” said Modi, when asked about the discontent. Mishra had ruled out any change in the leadership while interacting with the media in Patna on Thursday. Several Modi detractors, too, were canvassing for support in Delhi on Friday. Bihar minister and a challenger to Modi, Nand Kishore Yadav, met Rajnath while former state party president Gopal Narayan Singh called on party general secretary Arun Jaitley. Legislator Rameshwar Prasad Chaurasia, and a couple of other MLAs, too, were camping in town. “Rajnathji wants us to adopt a middle path, but I wonder if such an option exists now,” said a state leader, who spoke to Rajnath on Friday. Alarmed at this open defiance, the party is said to be exploring several options. “The rebels want nothing short of Modi’s head. An alternative option could, however, be the removal of state BJP president Radha Mohan Singh, a close Modi supporter. Grievances of the displaced ministers in the recent Cabinet reshuffle could be looked into. A core committee, comprising key members of the disenchanted legislators, too, could be constituted,” said a top leader engaged in the firefighting. A Modi supporter, however, cautioned that any alternative arrangement would be “unstable”. “A handful of leaders, aggrieved over the ministerial reshuffle, cannot hold the party leadership to ransom. This is not how the BJP is run,” he added. |
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