Bihar elections: Why Prashant Kishor's Jan Suraaj failed to open account?
Most of the JSP candidates have secured less than 10 per cent of the total votes polled.
Salar Web
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Majority of the JSP candidates look set to forfeit their security deposit (PTI)
Patna, 14 Nov
Prashant Kishor’s Jan Suraaj Party (JSP), dubbed the ‘X
factor’ in the Bihar polls, iss yet to open its account in the 243-member Assembly.
As per trends available with the Election Commission, most
of the JSP candidates have secured less than 10 per cent of the total votes
polled.
A majority of the JSP candidates in 238 constituencies look
set to forfeit their security deposit, according to the Commission data. In
many seats, the count is less than the NOTA (None of the Above) category.
JSP, floated by the former political strategist, failed to
galvanise votes in its favour, despite a high-pitched campaign and raising
pressing issues such as unemployment, migration and dearth of industries.
Before launching into the Bihar Assembly elections, the
celebrated former poll strategist Prashant Kishor had made two predictions, one
about his Jan Suraaj Party and the other about the JD(U), of which he is a
former national vice president.
His prediction of “arsh par ya farsh par” (either sky high
or down to dust) for his own party has, much to his chagrin, come true, though
JD(U) cadres, including its supreme leader Nitish Kumar, the Bihar Chief
Minister, may ridicule him for the forecast that the party will win “not more
than 25 seats”.
The JD(U)’s tally seems tipped to cross 80, its best
performance since 2010 when the party had crossed the three-digit mark, while
contesting a much larger number of seats compared with the 101 it did this
time.
Kishor, on his part, has his task cut out. His party, which
had tried to contest all 243 seats on its own and blamed top BJP leaders likeUnion Home Minister Amit Shah for the failure of some of its candidates to turn
up for filing of nomination papers, has failed to open its account.
The 47-year-old had
launched the party, with much fanfare, about a year ago, after a “padayatra”
that saw him marching across the length and breadth of Bihar over several
months.
Although Kishor is often pilloried for having wrongly
predicted that the BJP was likely to cross the 300-mark in the Lok Sabha
elections a year ago, he has always maintained that in a country where a large
section of the population is barely able to keep body and soul together, there
shall always remain a space for the Opposition.
“It is not the opposition, but the parties in the
opposition, which are weak in this country”, has been one of the most
insightful remarks made by the IPAC founder, whose prowess as a poll strategist
has benefitted leaders of as diverse hues as Narendra Modi, Nitish Kumar,
Mamata Banerjee, Arvind Kejriwal, Jagan Mohan Reddy, Uddhav Thackeray and M K
Stalin.
Not all his assignments, in his previous avatar, have
resulted in success for his clients, a fact which, according to his critics,
Kishor does not like to admit.
With age very much on his side and the opposition INDIA bloc
having been battered in Bihar, there is a virgin territory for Kishor and his
Jan Suraaj Party to explore.
But the Jan Suraaj Party is not the first party in which he
was active as a leader. His prowess in managing elections had endeared him to
Nitish Kumar, who, after returning as Chief Minister in 2015, appointed him as
an advisor with the rank of a cabinet minister.
Three years later, he joined the JD(U) and quickly became
the party’s national vice president, triggering speculations that Kumar saw in
him a successor to his own legacy.
However, just over a year later, Kishor was ousted for
openly lambasting Kumar’s equivocal stand on the Citizenship Amendment Act,
which had evoked protests in several parts of the country.
Soon after his expulsion, Kishor announced the launch of an
amorphous campaign, "Baat Bihar Ki", which was a non-starter.
After earning plaudits for handling the immensely successful
campaign of Mamata Banerjee who in 2021 returned as West Bengal CM for a third
term, Kishor toyed with the idea of "reviving" the Congress by
sharing a blueprint with the top leadership of the grand old party. However,
the deal never materialised.
Kishor had earlier claimed that his party would win 150
seats, but later asserted it would either be on the top or at the bottom in the
seat tally, but that there is no middle ground in the Bihar polls.
Meanwhile, JSP spokesperson Pavan K Varma said the party
would undertake a "serious review" of its performance in the Biharelections.
The NDA was set to sweep the Bihar polls, surging ahead in
close to 200 out of 243 seats, with the BJP winning in eight seats and leading
in 83 others, as the the EC data.
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