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Showing posts with label Lalu Prasad. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lalu Prasad. Show all posts

Monday, 1 February 2016

Urine to Dettol is our only progress: Lalu

Lalu Prasad Yadav said homeopathy was the real medical stream. File photo

Urine and Dettol are both antiseptic and the only progress we’ve made today is that we now wash our hands with Dettol, Rashtriya Janata Dal chief Lalu Prasad Yadav told homeopathy doctors at a function here on Saturday.

“Earlier we were using urine as antiseptic on cuts or bruises on our body… now we use Dettol, with which we can also wash our hands. This has been the only progress in medical science through the ages,” he said at the Homeopathic Science Congress in Patna. Mr. Prasad was not invited to the function. He had turned up in place of his elder son, State Health Minister Tej Pratap.

“Our chief guest, Tej Pratap Yadav, had another engagement. So Laluji agreed to grace the occasion in his place,” said an official.

Mr. Prasad said homeopathy was the real medical stream. “In allopathy, they only do chir-phad (surgery). But it is only because of homeopathy that people have now started living up to the age of 80,” said Mr. Prasad amidst laughter.

The RJD chief did not restrict himself to medicine. He regaled the audience with his take on other issues as well. “Internet marriages are not durable. People fall in love and get married. But they separate after a while… it is better to accept the choice of your parents and marry in the traditional way,” he said.

Mr. Prasad said he was against increasing the retirement age. “Young boys will not get a chance,” he said. And he demanded “smart villages” instead of “smart cities.”

State BJP leader Nand Kishore Yadav said Mr. Prasad’s presence at the homeopathy doctors’ conference showed who was running the government and the health department. “Chief Minister Nitish Kumar should officially declare Lalu Prasad the Super CM of Bihar,” Mr. Yadav said.

However, some of the doctors who attended the congress told The Hindu on Sunday that “they were amazed by his knowledge and the tips he offered on everything from medical science to social science.”

Sunday, 8 November 2015

Two-thirds majority for Nitish-Lalu Grand Alliance

A VICTORY TO SAVIOUR: Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar embraces RJD chief Lalu Prasad in Patna on Sunday. Photo: Ranjeet Kumar

As the Nitish Kumar-Lalu Prasad duo led the Grand Alliance on Sunday to a historic, thumping two-thirds majority, even reviving its junior partner, the Congress, the BJP-led NDA bit the dust — and the curtain came down on what must rate as one of the most bitterly fought Assembly elections in Bihar.
Conscious that this victory would resonate through the country, influencing politics in other parts, Chief Minister and JD (U) leader Nitish Kumar — composed but clearly moved by the extent of the mandate — said: “The Bihar 2015 poll will always be remembered as a milestone in the electoral politics of the State; it reflected the national mood.”
Mr. Kumar said the poll would be remembered as one where the “party at the Centre had put all its resources into an Assembly election.”

PARTY POSITIONS 243/243

PartiesWonLeading
BJP +
( BJP, LJP, HAM, RLSP)
580
JD(U)+
(JD(U), RJD, INC)
1780
Others
(SP, JAP, AIMIM, Independent)
70
Lalu Prasad, Rashtriya Janata Dal chief, has proved to be the kingmaker, providing both the mass support for the coalition and a sharp aggression at the stumps, countering Prime Minister Narendra Modi at every stage. Mr. Kumar lived up to his reputation of being a “Chanakya”: he retained his chief ministership, while helping old comrade Lalu Prasad return to the centre stage after many years in the political wilderness. In 1990, too, when Mr. Prasad became Chief Minister for the first time, Mr. Kumar’s role in that victory had earned him the sobriquet “Chanakya” of Bihar politics.
On Sunday evening, while the flamboyant Mr. Prasad, whose personal exit poll of 190 came closest to the results, threw open the gates of 10, Circular Road to the surging crowds, three houses down, the more reticent Mr. Kumar, after his press conferences, met party workers who milled around him, before walking onto the road outside. There he stood on a small wooden platform to accept more congratulations.
The decisive victory ensures that government formation will be smooth. Mr. Kumar said that first his party legislators would meet, and then all the coalition MLAs would meet to settle the issue of portfolios. To a question whether one of Mr. Prasad’s sons would be his Deputy Chief Minister, he said the press conference was not an appropriate forum to discuss the matter. The swearing-in ceremony is likely to be after Diwali.
At two post-victory press conferences, one at the RJD office followed by the other at the Chief Minister’s official residence, where the Congress’s Ashok Chowdhury, too, was present, Mr. Prasad underscored the fact that regardless of the numbers the two parties notched up, Mr. Kumar would be the Chief Minister.
Mr. Kumar called for an end to the bitterness, negativity and rancour that marked the election.
Mr. Kumar stressed that he intended to work with and respect the Opposition, despite its meagre tally. As for the Grand Alliance, he said, it was united by a common world view, an agreed programme of action and the desire to achieve consensus on all issues affecting the future of Bihar.
If the initial trends, thanks to the fact that the postal ballots were opened before the EVMs, favoured the BJP, leading its workers to celebrate prematurely, by 9.20 a.m. the trends reversed in favour of the grand coalition. It was then the turn of the workers of the JD(U), the RJD and the Congress to shout victory slogans, burst crackers and smear gulal on each other.
After the JD(U) and the BJP parted ways in June 2013, all eyes were on the Bihar Assembly election. It became a matter of prestige for both. Each looked for partners that would widen their social base; caste played a critical role in this election, but in the end, with Prime Minister Narendra Modi leading the NDA’s charge, it became a referendum on his 16 months in power rather than on Mr. Kumar’s decade as Chief Minister.
Mr. Modi, who flew to Bihar for a record 26 times to address public meetings, and BJP president Amit Shah crafted the party’s strategy, dominating even the billboards. This gave the grand coalition an opportunity to portray them as baharis (outsiders), even as the BJP leaders and activists sulked, finding themselves on the margins.

Lalu Prasad makes Grand comeback as kingmaker

  • RJD chief Lalu Prasad.


On the verge of being written off as also ran after his party’s dismal performance in the 2010 Assembly polls when it was restricted to a humiliating 22 seats in the 243-member Bihar House, Mr. Prasad pulled off an emphatic victory for the RJD, which was all set to emerge as the table topper.
Ousted in 2005 after a 15-year stint in power, the 2010 poll defeat sent the man who once lorded over Bihar virtually to the doghouse.
The once seemingly invincible RJD, with its massive Muslim-OBC vote bank, was not even eligible to claim the Leader of the Opposition post as the NDA under Nitish Kumar won an astounding four-fifths majority in the Assembly, winning 206 seats and restricting the RJD to a paltry 22, the latter’s worst-ever tally.
Mr. Prasad’s conviction in a fodder scam case in 2013 came as a personal blow to him as it led to his disqualification from the Lok Sabha and a ban from contesting an election at least for six years.
The 2014 Lok Sabha election was a crucial test for the backward class leader which he was to lead as a non-playing captain for the first time.
The results came as another jolt to the RJD and Mr. Prasad, with the party managing to win only four of the State’s 40 seats.
The successive defeats, however, carried seeds for a future reunion with friend-turned-foe Mr. Kumar, whose JD(U) had also been humiliated in the 2014 election, managing to win just two seats after parting ways with 17-year-old ally, the BJP, in June 2013 over Narendra Modi’s anointment as the party’s campaign spearhead for the 2014 Lok Sabha polls.
Acutely aware of Mr. Modi’s personal charisma and the BJP’s growing popularity in the State, they started moving closer after the Lok Sabha debacle.
With Samajwadi Party chief Mulayam Singh Yadav playing the role of a peacemaker, the two backward class heavyweights resolved their differences and decided to contest the 2015 Bihar polls in tandem.
Mr. Prasad, the wily practitioner of realpolitik, after initial reluctance, agreed to accept Mr. Kumar as the Grand Alliance’s chief ministerial candidate.
With he himself not eligible to contest elections, his wife Rabri Devi unwilling to return to the hurly burly of politics, and sons Tejaswi and Tej Pratap too young to handle the pressure that comes with the hot seat, Mr. Prasad declared Mr. Kumar will be the Chief Minister even if the RJD won more seats than the JD(U).
When RSS chief Mohan Bhagwat suggested a review of the reservation policy in an interview to Sangh organs Organizer and Panchjanya, Mr. Prasad, one of the most enduring mascots of post-Mandal politics, was quick to pounce on it and raise an alarm about a move by the Modi government to scrap quotas.
Mr. Prasad repeated the charge, rally after election rally, and Mr. Modi’s counteroffensive about the Grand Alliance favoring a dilution of quotas for Dalits, tribals and OBCs to give 5 per cent reservation to Muslims failed to cut much ice with the electorate.
After the Dadri lynching incident, Mr. Prasad made the controversial Hindus-too-eat –beef remark, which the Prime Minister tried to use to the hilt to ensure alienation of the RJD’s Yadav vote bank, still largely engaged in cattle rearing in the State, from him.
However, Mr. Modi failed to make any substantial dent in Mr. Prasad’s Yadav support base.
While there was an apparent consolidation of backward class and Muslim voters in Grand Alliance’s favor, the beef talk by the leaders of the NDA, particularly the BJP, including Mr. Modi, failed to bring about a consolidation of Hindu votes in the favor of the center's ruling alliance.
Mr. Prasad promptly declared the poll as “Mandal Raj Part II” and a fight between the “backwards and forwards”, ensuring a rapid polarization along caste lines, something which had kept the RJD in power for 15 years in the politically volatile State.
With the JD(U)-RJD-Congress Grand Alliance’s victory, the man who once ruled Bihar like a king, will now be the kingmaker.

Friday, 30 October 2015

I am not a 'bahari' in Bihar, says Modi

Prime Minister Narendra Modi during an election rally in Muzaffarpur, Bihar.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi addressed two election rallies in Gopalganj and Muzaffarpur, Bihar.
Highlights of his speech:
1. The process of the first three phase elections in Bihar went on peacefully.
2. I am astonished that as soon as this election is coming to an end, the grand alliance is getting impatient.
3. Nitish Babu, Lalu ji, the more you spill the dirt, the more the Kamaal (lotus) will blossom.
4. People in goverance should give the account of the work they have done during elections. In 2019, during the Lok Sabha elections, when I come back I will have to give account of work I did in 5 years.
5. When the youth votes for a party, it has the right to know the account of work the party has done.
6. Congress has ruled Bihar for 35 years, Lalu ji ruled for 15 years and Nitish Babu ruled for 10 years. Altogether, they have ruled for 60 years in Bihar. Have they given you account of their work last 60 years?
9. Nitish Babu says that Modi is Bahari (outsider). When Bihar has voted for me to become the PM then how can I be an outsider?
10. Do you call Sonia ji, who stays in Delhi, Bihari or Bahari (an outsider)?
11. Congress ruled for 35 years, but they didn't do anything for development.
12. Since 25 years, people of Bihar made sure Congress does not rule again.
13. Lalu-ji was genious in fooling the people of Bihar. But, when the truth emerged, people of Bihar replaced Lalu ji with Nitish Kumar.
14. Even Nitish Kumar could not give any account on what work they did for the state.
15. The poor people need government schools for education. They need government hospitals.
16. Government is for those who do not have support of anyone. We want to build a government for poor people.
17. We will give loans to the poor people, so that they can use it for their development.
18. Around 3 lakh people utilised the loan services in Bihar.
19. It is a happy news for me, that all the services introduced by the Central government have been utilised by people of Bihar.
20. There is only one way, that is 'Vikaas'.
21. We fought against corruption, we have been in service for 16 months, but nobody can blame me for corruption.
22. India is moving further with honesty. Don't we need an honest government in Bihar?
23. Recently, a minister from Nitish Kumar's cabinet was caught taking bribe to sell Bihar. The people of Bihar will not forget this.
24. Aren't they fooling us? Lalu ji was accused of corruption, he is out on parole. did Nitish Kumar take over his residence and open a school in his house as promised?
25. The biggest problem of Bihar, the development of youth.
26. Shouldn't the youth of Bihar get job opportunities within the state?
27. I have three aims for Bihar: Education, job opportunities, health care.
28. Bihar needs electricity, isn't it? Bihar is the only state in India, where 4,000 villages still do not have electricity.
29. By 2022, we are planning to make sure electricity reaches every village in Bihar.
30. Nitish Kumar did not keep his promise about electricity.
31. 'Vikaas' is the only path for our success.
32. We have to be in 21st century, our youngsters need laptops for successful future.
33. Bihar can be pulled out the hole, only when there is an engine in Bihar and an engine in central government. Pull Bihar out of the hole.
34. Its time for the fourth-phase voting, first we will vote then we will enjoy!

Tuesday, 27 October 2015

We’ve pinned Modi down, says Lalu

RJD chief Lalu Prasad, along with his daughter Misa Bharti, addresses a
press conference in Patna on Tuesday.

A day before Tej Pratap and Tejaswi, sons of RJD chief Lalu Prasad, face the electorate in the third phase of the Bihar Assembly elections on Wednesday, The Hindu interacted with the Yadav family, including its patriarch, on the prospects of the Grand Alliance or Mahagathbandhan and the ups and downs of the campaign.
As the last-minute preparations for polling in Raghopur and Mahua (from where Tejaswi and Tej Pratap are contesting) go on in the former Chief Minister’s sprawling Circular Road bungalow here on Tuesday, Mr. Lalu Prasad said Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s attack on his party and family members “is a recognition of the fact that we [the Grand Alliance] have managed to pin him down.”
“The BJP and [Prime Minister] Modi are taken aback by the fact that the RJD and the Congress are working to establish Nitish Kumar as Chief Minister of Bihar again, and not only that, this election is not a fight for just one State, but between Mr. Modi and all who value socialism and secularism,” he said.
“It was because we were scattered that he was able to become Prime Minister. After these elections, you will see how the situation in Indian politics changes,” he said. “This is not Maharashtra or Haryana, this is Bihar,” he added for good measure.
Asked about his earlier differences with Mr. Nitish Kumar and what prompted him to endorse him as the chief ministerial candidate, Mr. Lalu Prasad said: Woh sab hawa ho gaya [Our differences melted into the air].”
His daughter Misa Bharti had more details of what weighed in on that decision.
“We were not sure our vote transference would take place if we announced a name, but the feedback from the ground assured us that this was not an issue,” Ms. Bharti said.
Hamare paas dulha declared hai, inke paas dulha kahaan hai? [Our bridegroom has been declared, where is theirs (NDA)],” Mr. Lalu Prasad asked. He took exception to what Mr. Modi said at a rally on Monday about a conspiracy to bring in reservation for “a certain community” and dilute the provision for the backward classes.

“He is ignorant. Everyone knows that nobody can give reservation in this country on the basis of religion. Earlier he had used gau maas [beef] to polarise voters. He is spreading a virus, but I have the DDT spray,” he said. He also objected to what the Prime Minister said about Misa Bharti at the rally. Beti, beti hoti hai[a girl child is everyone’s daughter]. My daughter has an MBBS degree, polled three lakh votes in her election. On the one hand, he [Mr. Modi] says beti padhao, beti badhao, and then says things like this,” he said.

Sunday, 25 October 2015

No party can change quota policy, says Modi

At his poll meeting at Naubatpur in Patna, the last on Sunday, Prime Minister Narendra Modi broke his silence on the issue of reservation, saying no party today could afford to make any change in the reservation policy enshrined in the Constitution.
He said that on this issue, he was with Nitish Kumar, Lalu Prasad and other leaders. “There will be no change in the reservation policy that Babasaheb Ambedkar espoused in the Constitution… In fact, no party today can afford to make any change,” he said. “Rights given by Babasaheb Ambedkar for the socially backward classes will never be taken away by my government … ” Mr. Modi said.
In the States where the BJP was in power quotas had not been tampered with, he said.
“I’ve been Chief Minister of Gujarat for 15 years… We’ve government in Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan, Maharashtra, Haryana and in other States as well but nowhere reservation has been touched.”
Striking a personal note, he said: “Sometimes I wonder had Babasaheb Ambedkar not been there, what would have happened to Narendra Modi, who was selling tea in trains in his childhood.”
On the same page
In a bid to clear the confusion over the BJP’s stand on the reservation issue, Mr. Modi said that he might have differences with Nitish Kumar and Lalu Prasad or others on other matters, but on the issue of quota he held the same view.
“We cannot even think of doing anything with the reservation policy. There has not been any demand for a change in the policy from anywhere…in fact, there are only demands from others to include them in the reservation benefits,” said the Prime Minister.
“But, since they [rival grand alliance leaders] have no other issues, they are spreading misinformation and canards against us,” Mr. Modi charged.
Earlier, in an interview, RSS chief Mohan Bhagwat had said that there should be a “review” of the reservation policy. That statement put the BJP-led NDA on the back foot in the Bihar election campaign.

Friday, 9 October 2015

Show restraint, EC tells parties as Bihar polls near

Prime Minister Narendra Modi with Jitan Ram Manjhi at a meeting at Sasaram in Rohtas district of Bihar on Friday. — PHOTO: RANJEET KUMAR

As the level of the campaign for the Bihar Assembly polls deteriorated into personal attacks, the State Election Commission has sent a letter to all political parties to show restraint while commenting on rivals.
State Chief Electoral Officer K. Ajay Kumar’s letter expressed “anguish and serious concern about the plummeting levels of political speeches made by various political party leaders and candidates in the ongoing general elections in Bihar.”
“The tone and tenor of the political speeches have been found to be calculated to cause mutual hatred, disharmony or ill-will and aimed to aggravate the differences between different political parties and classes of citizens on the grounds of religion, caste and community which the Model Code of Conduct dissuades the political parties and candidates [from]”, said the EC letter.

Slide in discourse

The discourse has seen an unedifying slide from Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD) chief fat-shaming BJP president Amit Shah when the latter got stuck in a lift in Patna, saying “such a bulky man should not get into lifts” to Mr. Shah calling attention to Mr. Lalu Prasad’s conviction by a CBI special court in the fodder scam by terming him a “chaara chor (fodder thief).

Mr. Shah was termed a “nar bhakshi” or cannibal, again by Mr. Lalu Prasad and he was in turn termed as someone who consorted with the devil by Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
On Friday, Mr. Prasad took things a little further. “If I’m devil, PM Modi is brahm pisaach [demon] and I know the medicine to drive this demon from Bihar,” he said.
Eclipse of ideology blamed for fall in standards
As the level of the campaign for the Bihar Assembly polls deteriorated into personal attacks, experts attributed the fall in standards to the eclipse of political ideology. According to Saibal Gupta, founder of the Asian Development Research Institute, there have been acrimonious elections in Bihar in the past, but none with this kind of rhetoric.
“This is commensurate with the eclipse of ideology in political parties. Earlier one would refer to rivals being ‘capitalist so and so’ or pseudo socialist or something, now levels of personal accusation have reached the lowest level, since parties have moved beyond ideology to promoting families, etc,” he said.
The tangled history of the broken alliances in Bihar, between the BJP and the Janata Dal (U) and the RJD and the Ram Vilas Paswan-led Lok Janshakti Party (LJP) haven’t helped much.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi perhaps termed it best on Friday morning in Aurangabad, when he said that political parties were scouring dictionaries to find more swear words to use against him. By the time the fifth phase of polling rolls around, that may yet become redundant.

Thursday, 8 October 2015

Modi breaks silence on Dadri lynching

Prime Minister Narendra Modi:

Prime Minister Narendra Modi, speaking at an election rally in Nawada, Bihar, on Thursday, broke his eight-day silence on the lynching of Mohammad Akhlaqin Dadri, Uttar Pradesh.
Akhlaq was beaten to death by a mob which suspected him of having stored and consumed beef. Several members of the BJP are among the suspects in the case.
Mr. Modi, who had come under criticism for failing to speak up on the issue or restrain his party leaders from making incendiary statements, referred to President Pranab Mukherjee’s statement just a day before, to drive home his point.
“I have said it earlier too. Hindus should decide whether to fight Muslims or poverty. Muslims have to decide whether to fight Hindus or poverty. Both need to fight poverty together. The country has to stay united, only communal harmony and brotherhood will take the nation forward. People should ignore controversial statements made by politicians, as they are doing so for political gains.”
However Mr. Modi’s remarks were met with criticism. Former J&K Chief Minister Omar Abdullah tweeted why there was no outright condemnation of the Dadri lynching.
Modi targets Lalu Prasad
Prime Minister Narendra Modi, while addressing an election rally in Nawada, Bihar on Thursday, emphasized that only communal harmony and brotherhood could take the country forward.
Citing President Pranab Mukherjee’s speech a day before, Mr. Modi said: “Mr. Mukherjee’s message is the best guidance we can get as a nation. We should follow the path shown by the President,” he said.
Mr. Mukherjee, speaking at a book release function, had said, “We can’t allow the core values of our civilization to be wasted. The core values are that over the years, civilization celebrated diversity, promoted and advocated tolerance, enjoyed plurality.” Reactions to Mr. Modi’s comments were, however, critical as being too little, too late. “It took a few days, but our Honorable Prime Minister finally broke his silence. We didn’t get an outright condemnation, but at least something is better than nothing,” said former Jammu and Kashmir Chief Minister Omar Abdullah, on Twitter.
Former Union Minister R.P.N. Singh said: “The Prime Minister should come forward and speak on it, instead of just condemning it and giving it new twists.”
At the rallies in Munger and Begusarai earlier, Mr. Modi launched a frontal attack on Rashtriya Janata Dal leader Lalu Prasad, charging him with betraying the Yadavs, with his claim that some Hindus did consume beef.
He told the crowds that Mr. Prasad should not be absolved of his “beef remark” even though he had claimed that it was the “devil” that had made him say it.
“I want to know how the shaitan got his address. He recognizes that it was the shaitan, just as people recognize their relatives,” Mr. Modi said.

Wednesday, 7 October 2015

Lalu ‘out of sync’ with new Bihar

  • RJD chief Lalu Prasad Yadav


“Lalu Prasad had given backward castes a voice and self-respect, but his own caste’s dominance gave him a bad name,” said an ageing Manoranjan Chaurasia, taking a break from a game of cards in a field in his village in Khagaria district.
Youngsters of his caste aren’t this charitable and display impatience with Mr. Prasad’s politics. “We need industry. I have stayed in Gujarat and Maharashtra. People look down upon Bihar as we don’t have industry here,” Prabhash Chaurasia said, disagreeing with the elder village resident. He said he supported the BJP.
The political graph of Rashtriya Janata Dal supremo Lalu Prasad is falling as aspirations change, caste politics becomes nuanced and people charge the RJD with corruption and poor governance.
Mr. Prasad said days back that the present contest was between forward and backward castes. BJP ally and Mahadalit leader of the Musahar caste Jitan Ram Manjhi promptly disagreed.
The statement reflected Bihar politics of the 1990s, which seems to have changed now.
His conviction on corruption charges and image of poor governance apart, Mr. Prasad’s decline also stems from a gradual change in backward caste politics in Bihar. The first change was non-Yadavs seeking an autonomous space within OBC politics, which was symbolised by Mr. Kumar allying with the BJP — then seen as an upper caste party — to take on Mr. Prasad in 1994. The alliance defeated the RJD in 2005, and the BJP accepted Mr. Kumar as NDA’s leader in Bihar.
The scenario has changed further now. OBCs are no longer a bloc, and backward caste politics displays fragmentation even as individual backward castes seek welfare schemes and affirmative action. They are open to aligning with the BJP though many of them have fond memories of Mr. Kumar’s rule.
“Narendra Modi and Sushil Modi being from backward castes, OBCs and EBCs are increasingly open to allying with the BJP,” JNU academic Badri Narayan, an expert on caste, told The Hindu. He pointed to internal differentiation between backward castes. Sajjan Kumar Singh, a JNU doctoral student of politics who has surveyed Bihar for a month, said, “Each backward caste is looking at its own interest. There isn’t a bloc any longer; there are many individual castes.”
This affords the BJP a good opportunity to reach out to small, individual castes. This reporter’s visits to villages of OBCs and EBCs revealed interesting trends.
Chief Minister Nitish Kumar had sought to carve out a coherent EBC block as Chief Minister. But these castes aren’t acting as a group. Many have fond memories of Mr. Kumar’s rule but do not share the same sentiment for the RJD.
With an overarching backward caste politics no longer the glue, many backward castes in Yadav regions are uneasy with Yadav dominance, observers say. A Congress leader said he feared this would give the BJP a hidden advantage, as Yadavs outnumbered the BJP-supporting dominant castes, the Bhumihars and Rajputs.
The same may be true for Scheduled Castes in regions where Yadavs have a strong presence. Musahars of Barkhaban village in Gaya are with the NDA. They work in fields owned by Yadavs and the smirk on their faces is unmistakable when they say the landowners vote for Mr. Prasad.
The grand alliance still commands a Muslim-Yadav-Kurmi vote bank.