
Call it the AAP effect. On Friday, after Jitan Ram Manjhi quit as Bihar chief minister and before JD(U) leader Nitish Kumar was invited to form the government, the latter addressed the media in Patna and issued a public apology for quitting the CM’s office after his party’s disastrous show in the May general election. In the political theatre of Bihar, even a seasoned actor like Nitish is unsure what would click at the box office. However, he seems to believe that the next Bihar assembly polls could be turned into a presidential-style election, with him as the face of clean politics. An apology for abandoning the post may help him retrieve some of the ground, as it did for Arvind Kejriwal in Delhi.
But Nitish’s confession that he misread the political moment in May, when he chose to quit on a “sentimental” note and placed Manjhi, an uncontroversial and low-profile minister from a Mahadalit caste, in the CM’s office, is revealing. Nitish had hoped that he would consolidate the Mahadalit vote bank without challenging his hold over the party. But power produces its own dynamic, and Manjhi saw in his elevation an opportunity to carve out his own political space. A parting of ways became inevitable, especially with the BJP entering the fray. It was a JD(U)-BJP alliance that won the mandate in 2010, with the RJD-LJP combine and the Congress making up the opposition. Five years since, alliances, and a new social coalition is being forged between the upper caste base of the BJP and the Mahadalits, presumably now with Manjhi. A united Janata with the support of the Congress and the communists presents an equally formidable political grouping.