Subscribe to enjoy similar stories. Even before the Delhi assembly election results were out, people had started speculating whether “INDIA bloc" was signing its death warrant. Jammu and Kashmir chief minister Omar Abdullah demanded that members of the bloc should get together to work out a framework for moving forward once the elections ended.
Abdullah was worried as bloc members Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) and the Congress were contesting each other in Delhi. His apprehension proved right. The bloc faces another litmus test in Bihar, where assembly elections are due in November-December.
The Tejashwi Yadav-led Rashtriya Janata Dal and the Congress have been contesting elections jointly here. But key coalition members regret conceding far too many seats to Congress in the 2020 assembly elections. Congress had managed to extract 70 seats for itself, but won only 19 of them at the last election.
Tejashwi, in fact, missed the CM’s post by just 13,000 votes and 12 seats. Had the Congress delivered its part of the bargain, the political landscape of Bihar would have been different. Also read | Hatred thrives in forgetfulness of a country’s past In 2017, after losing the Uttar Pradesh assembly elections, Samajwadi Party leaders also had the same lament.
The same story played out in Tamil Nadu. That’s why at the last assembly election Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK) gave the Congress only half the number of seats it was allocated in the previous election. Will Tejashwi adopt the same approach in Bihar this time? The Congress is restricted to just three states—Telangana, Karnataka, and Himachal Pradesh—today and is increasingly dependent on allies for political relevance.
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