Premium
This is an archive article published on February 20, 2015

Manjhi resigns as CM ahead of trust vote, Nitish eyes comeback

Chief Minister Jitan Ram Manjhi resigned after he met the Governor this morning.

manjhi resigns, manjhi, nitish kumar, jitan ram manjhi, bihar crisis, bihar news, manjhi news, BJP Jitan Ram Manjhi, who resigned today from the Bihar chief minister’s post

Jitan Ram Manjhi resigned as chief minister on Friday, half an hour before he was supposed to face a floor test in the Bihar Assembly. The move came as a surprise to all parties since Manjhi had so far claimed that he would prove his majority in the 233-member House, despite JD(U) leader Nitish Kumar parading 130 legislators in his support in front of the Governor and the President.

Following the resignation, a scheduled speech by Governor Keshari Nath Tripathi at the start of the Budget Session was cancelled and the House would now be adjourned sine die.

Nitish, who was later in the day invited by Tripathi to form the government, would be sworn in as CM at Raj Bhavan on Sunday. He has been given three weeks to prove his majority in the House.
Manjhi’s supporters as well as the BJP had hoped that he would make an impassioned speech in the House, playing the Mahadalit card. Instead, he resigned at 10.30 am — before the session started and just around the time Nitish arrived at the Bihar Legislative Council.

Story continues below this ad

At a hurriedly organised press conference at the CM’s House, Manjhi said, “I decided to resign this morning when I saw the sitting arrangement in the House, which was sent by the Speaker. Names of some of my MLAs were not on the list and my ministers did not have positions near me. The Speaker did not recognise our chief whip and, surprisingly, the JD(U) was made the main Opposition. I felt my MLAs and I were insulted. We feared the marshals could misbehave with us. Plus I did not want my MLAs, some of them poor, to lose their membership for voting in my favour.”

Sources said 35 marshals were present in the House and 50 had been kept on standby to prevent any trouble. Forty ambulances were also kept on standby.
Manjhi said he had not recommended dissolution of the House, and it was now up to the Governor to take a call.

Meanwhile, Nitish said he was looking forward to serving the state again. He added that he did not harbour any ill will towards Manjhi.

Sources in the BJP, which had decided to back Manjhi during the floor test, said the party was “let down” by his decision.
Manjhi said that though the Governor had accepted his request for a secret ballot “to save MLAs from harassment”, he had learnt that the Speaker would not allow it. Manjhi also alleged that he and his legislators were being threatened and “some people” had been posted outside the homes of his loyalists to intimidate them. “I still claim the support of 140 MLAs but one would have seen it only in case of secret ballot,” he said.

Story continues below this ad

An MLA from the Manjhi camp claimed the Speaker had listed only 227 MLAs in the sitting arrangement, leaving out Manjhi and five of his ministers.
Manjhi said he had called a meeting on February 28 to discuss possibilities for the future, including floating a new party. Former minister and Manjhi loyalist Nitish Mishra said, “Manjhi is the biggest political factor in Bihar and he can prove to be a turning point.” Another loyalist, Brishen Patel, said there was now a clear division in the JD(U) and Nitish would know his place after the Assembly elections.

Manjhi claimed that some MLAs from the Nitish camp, who wanted to vote for him, had come to the CM’s House late Thursday night. “When the media saw them, they had to cover their faces. Such is the fear of Nitish Kumar,” he said.

He added, “Just when I started working for all sections of society and came out of Nitish’s shadow, he felt uncomfortable. He was jealous of my popularity and his position as supreme JD(U) leader was threatened. For the initial few months of my tenure, I used to get a list on portfolios and postings and I only used to sign.”

Asked about the BJP’s decision to support him, Manjhi said he was not thinking along party lines and had sought the support of MLAs from all parties.
He also came out with a list of important decisions taken by his government. “I was the only CM who thought of pension for journalists. I have ended the difference between Dalits and Mahadalits by including Paswans in the Mahadalit category,” he said, adding that the people of Bihar would give a befitting reply to the “insult done to the son of a Dalit”.

Story continues below this ad

BJP state president Mangal Pandey, meanwhile, said, “It is Manjhi’s decision. As for us, we stood by him to uphold Dalit pride.” BJP legislature party leader Sushil Kumar Modi, too, questioned the Speaker’s sitting arrangement.

Watch video below:

Stay updated with the latest - Click here to follow us on Instagram

Latest Comment
Post Comment
Read Comments
Advertisement

You May Like

Advertisement