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JD-U breaks ties with BJP in Bihar, to face trust vote on Wednesday

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JUNE 17- In a major setback to the NDA ahead of next year’s Lok Sabha election, the JD-U  on Sunday broke its ties with the BJP in Bihar in protest against the elevation of Narendra Modi, bringing to an end a 17-year-old alliance that had held firm through thick and thin in the national politics.

Heading the eight-year-old coalition in the state, JD-U, which does not need BJP’s support to run the government, removed 11 saffron ministers from the state Cabinet and decided to seek a vote of confidence on June 19 in view of the “new situation”.
NITISH-KUMAR
The JD-U has 118 seats in the 243-member assembly, only four short of majority, while the BJP has 91 members. There are six independents in the assembly while the Congress has four members.

The split is a major jolt to the BJP-led National Democratic Alliance (NDA) which is now left with only three constituents — BJP, Shiv Sena and Shiromani Akali Dal (SAD).

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JD-U President Sharad Yadav and Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar announced the break up of the coalition at a press conference, exactly a week after Modi was made the BJP’s campaign committee chairman, considered just a step short of being made the prime ministerial candidate. Yadav also quit as Convenor of the NDA.

“We cannot compromise with our basic principles. We are not worried about the consequences. As long as the alliance was Bihar-centric, there was no problem. But we had no alternative now. We are not responsible. We were forced to take this decision.

“The BJP is going through a new phase. As long as there was no external interference in the Bihar alliance, it ran smoothly. Problems began whenever there was external interference,” Kumar said without taking the name of Modi even once in the half-an-hour press conference but made several barbs aimed at him.

Though JD-U’s decision comes a week after Modi’s elevation in Goa, the party’s National Council had a few months ago set a deadline of December asking BJP to name its PM candidate.

The party has always made its aversion to Modi explicitly clear on a number of occasions. Kumar had three years cancelled a dinner with senior BJP leaders including L.K. Advani because of Modi’s presence.

“I have urged the Governor to call a special session of the Assembly on June 19 for a confidence vote,” Nitish Kumar said after a meeting with Governor D.Y. Patil.

Kumar drove to Raj Bhavan after he had a meeting with JD(U) leaders at his Anne Marg residence. He spent about half-an-hour in the Governor’s House.

Party sources said the JD(U) meeting adopted a resolution saying the Narendra Modi brand of politics was dangerous as a section of the society was wary of him.

INDIA TODAY