
Patna, March 30 With Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar giving up his membership of the state legislative council, speculation is now rife about who would head the new government, to be formed after the JD(U) president relinquishes the seat of power.
Kumar, who turned 75 on March 1, surprised everyone a week later when he announced his decision to join the Rajya Sabha, signaling that he wanted to end his tenure as Chief Minister, just four months after receiving a fresh mandate in the Assembly elections.
Close aides of the leader have, for some time, been making cryptic remarks about a constitutional provision that allows a person to "remain the Chief Minister for up to six months after ceasing to be a member of the state legislature".
Such statements, even by senior ministers like Shravan Kumar, have fueled speculation that the JD(U), which has only four fewer MLAs than the BJP, could negotiate fiercely before allowing its alliance partner to claim the top post.
However, sources in the NDA say it was unlikely that Kumar, who may be sworn in as a Rajya Sabha MP early next month, would remain in the seat of power for that long, especially since a change of guard could only take place "after Kharmaas", the inauspicious month, as per the Hindu calendar, that ends on April 14.
The BJP camp is thrilled at the prospect of finally having its "own Chief Minister" in the only Hindi-speaking state where the seat of power has remained elusive, despite it having been a member of the ruling coalition for nearly two decades.
Names of many potential candidates are doing the rounds, with Samrat Choudhary, the Deputy Chief Minister who holds the crucial Home portfolio, being the frontrunner.
Choudhary is a Koeri, a numerically significant OBC group that has not been aligned with any particular party, unlike the Yadavs, who are die-hard supporters of Lalu Prasad's RJD, or the Kurmis who revere Nitish Kumar.
BJP sources admit that by making a Koeri the CM, the party may secure, for a long time, the support of the dominant OBC group, besides ending the perception that it was a "pro-upper caste" political force, which puts it at a disadvantage in a state like Bihar, where politics has for decades been influenced by the Mandal agitation of the 1990s.
However, some old-timers in the BJP point out that Choudhary, whom Union Home Minister Amit Shah had famously promised to make a "bada aadmi" (big man) during the assembly elections, may not enjoy much support from the powerful Sangh lobby, given that he spent nearly two decades of his political career in RJD and JD(U), before joining the saffron party in 2017.
Another prominent name that is doing the rounds is that of Nityanand Rai, a former state BJP president, who is understood to be a favourite of Shah, by virtue of having been the Union Minister of State for Home.
Party sources also concede that while the new CM will be announced at a meeting of the legislative party, whenever it is held, the person occupying the seat of power will be "handpicked by the powers that be in Delhi".
They cite the example of Rajasthan, where a first-term MLA was made the CM, after a Union minister was rumoured to have flown down to Jaipur carrying a small piece of paper with the name inscribed.
Meanwhile, JD(U) sources assert that they will insist on "a fair share" in the new cabinet, and the supremo's son Nishant Kumar, who joined the party only recently, was likely to be pushed for the Deputy CM's post.





