#Jharkhand CM Public Appearances
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Chief Minister Hemant Soren Participates In Ranchi Rath Yatra
CM Joins Wife Kalpana And Son In Pulling Lord Jagannath’s Chariot Event draws participation from prominent political figures across party lines. RANCHI – Jharkhand Chief Minister Hemant Soren took part in Ranchi’s Rath Yatra celebrations on Sunday, accompanied by his wife Kalpana Soren and one of his sons. The CM participated in the rasbandhan ceremony and helped pull the chariot of Lord…
#राज्य#Hemant Soren Religious Participation#Jamshedpur cultural news#Jharkhand CM Public Appearances#Jharkhand political leaders#Kalpana Soren MLA#Lord Jagannath Chariot Pulling#Rajesh Thakur Congress#Ranchi Rath Yatra#Ranchi Religious Festivals#Sanjay Seth MP#state
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JAC Jharkhand board 10th, 12th exams 2020 begin today, 6.21 Lakh students to appear - education
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JAC Jharkhand board 10th, 12th exams 2020 begin today, 6.21 Lakh students to appear - education
Over 6.21 lakh students will write the matriculation (class 10) and intermediate (class 12) examinations across 1,410 centres under strict vigilance of CCTV cameras from Tuesday.
Conducted by the Jharkhand Academic Council (JAC), the examinations will be conducted in two sittings. The matric examination will be held in the first sitting and the intermediate in the second.
JAC secretary Mahip Kumar Singh said altogether 387,021 students would appear for the matric exams at 940 centres, while 234,363 students would take the intermediate examinations in 470 centres.
The matric exams will begin with the Home Science paper and conclude with Sanskrit paper on February 28. The inter exams will start with vocational papers and conclude with Biology, Geography, and Business Mathematics on the same date.
JAC officials on Monday were busy making the last-minute preparations for the two major examinations. “We reviewed if question paper and answer sheets reached in place today or not. As per our information till afternoon, no complaint was received from any corner of the state,” said Singh.
The CCTVs cameras were installed largely this year across the centres to stop unfair means practices during the examination. “The CCTV cameras were installed in every classroom of every centre. If cameras are properly functioning or not were also checked today,” added Singh.
The footage from the cameras would be monitored at a control room in centre superintendent’s cell.
JAC has asked deputy commissioners of districts to ensure adequate security forces to conduct free and fair examination. The team of invigilators will be responsible for conducting peaceful examinations in their respective centres.
Mobile phones will be banned for all at the examination centres. Neither students nor invigilators or teachers will be allowed to use mobile phones at the centre, officials said.
In a bid to prevent cheating during the examinations, checking will be conducted at different levels, including students, will be checked properly before their entry into the examination centre and again before their entry into the classroom.
The centre superintendents were asked to ensure proper electricity supply, adequate facility of drinking water and toilets at the examination centres.
Examinees are all prepared to write the examination. Students expressed confidence to score good in the examinations. A student of matriculation, Putul Mishra from Mandakini High School, Bada Jamua in Dhanbad, said, “I have worked hard on model questions and syllabus. So, I am hoping to do good in the examination,” Mishra said.
BOX STORY
Students can’t be stopped from appearing in exams due lack of fees: CM
Chief minister Hemant Soren on Monday gave instruction to the education department officials to ensure that no student be stopped by the private or public sector schools from appearing in the annual examinations due to lack of fees.
The chief minister said this during a review meeting of the department of school education and literacy.
Sources said chief minister was frequently getting complaints that students, who could not deposit fees, were being stopped by school managements from appearing in the final examinations.
Chief minister said school management whether it was private, government or run by public sectors could not deprive students from appearing in the annual examination.
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New chapter for young Jharkhand as JMM-led alliance’s rule begins - assembly elections
Since Monday morning, scores of Jharkhand Mukti Morcha (JMM) supporters had gathered outside his Ranchi house, distributing sweets to celebrate the Jharkhand election results. Hemant Soren didn’t want to jump the gun and waited for the lead to stabilise. As it became clear that the Opposition alliance comprising the JMM, Congress and the Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD) was headed for a comfortable victory, 44-year-old Soren drove down to his father Shibu Soren’s residence less than a kilometre away to seek his blessings.The photographs were quickly put out. In one, he was touching 75-year-old Shibu Soren’s feet. In a video, the father and son could be seen taking a walk around in the garden. In a third, Shibu Soren’s wife Kalpana Soren joined them.It was a day of celebrations for JMM leaders and workers, who thronged the streets of Ranchi and other cities with party flags and distributed sweets. Celebrations broke out in the Congress and the RJD camps as well.Later at a press conference, JMM working president Soren, the chief ministerial candidate of the alliance, said, “We will sit with the alliance partners and decide the course of action.” He thanked his father, RJD leader Lalu Prasad, and Congress leaders Sonia Gandhi, Rahul Gandhi and Priyanka Gandhi Vadra, among others.The Opposition alliance described the results as the beginning of a “new chapter”, and the Congress linked the mandate to the Citizenship Amendment Act and the National Register of Citizens. It said the people have demolished “arrogance” of the BJP. The BJP, however, attributed its defeat to local issues and “internal strife” in the state.Prime Minister Narendra Modi congratulated Soren for the victory and extended his best wishes to the alliance. Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) president Amit Shah said his party respects the mandate of voters and also expressed his gratitude to the people of Jharkhand for giving the BJP a chance to govern the state for five years.BJP spokesperson GVL Narasimha Rao attributed the party’s loss in Jharkhand to “local issues”, and said “internal strife” also appeared to have a significant fallout. “Inability of local leadership to convince the electorate for repeat of the mandate and internal strife within the party also appeared to have a significant fall out. A detailed analysis will be done,” he said.Outgoing Jharkhand CM Raghubar Das took responsibility for the election outcome, saying it was his defeat, and not of the BJP. Later in the day, Das submitted his resignation to the governor. “I met Governor Droupadi Murmu and submitted my resignation. The governor asked me to be caretaker CM till the new government is formed,” Das told reporters after coming out of the Raj Bhavan in Ranchi.The BJP and the All Jharkhand Students Union, or the AJSU party, which had been in alliance since the creation of the state 19 years ago, failed to reach a seat-sharing formula and fought separately.Das, whose government is first one to complete five years in the state, said, “I have worked for the development of Jharkhand, providing electricity, roads and other schemes, covering every section of the society. In future also, I will serve as a BJP worker as party has always been working for the building of nation.”Former Congress president Rahul Gandhi congratulated his party, coalition partners and workers on the decisive victory of the alliance in Jharkhand, while party general secretary Priyanka Gandhi Vadra said the people want to hear from the government on employment, bread, water, land, farming and trade.“Today the public’s answer has come. Congratulations to all the members of the grand alliance. Congratulations to Hemant Soren. Congratulations and love to the Congress workers,” she said in a tweet in Hindi.Significantly, Das also said the BJP’s failure to cling on to the alliance with the AJSU party and the opposition parties’ ability to keep their coalition intact are the reasons for the loss in the assembly election. “Our alliance could not happen while the opposition coalition remained intact. The party will review all the points (that led to the defeat) and try to plug the loopholes,” he told reporters after submitting his resignation letter to the governor.With agency inputs Read the full article
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Why BJP failed to breach Kejriwal’s bastion
It is universally acknowledged that incumbent governments are in campaign mode all through their tenure, while opposition gets its act together closer to the hustings. I use this banal observation not because it merits mention, but to remind you that politics and elections are a 24/7/365 effort. Over the years with the advent of high octane political campaigns, the import of this understanding has diluted. Incumbents think they will figure out the future and the freebies in their 4th year in power, while the opposition takes on the government only tactically and believes in mounting a challenge only when the election season arrives.
Probably, it is better utilisation of resources but certainly not smarter utilisation of resources. Because the voters form their opinion of parties over every day of their existence. Which is why “living the character” in politics is so important for ones branding.
Delhi Assembly elections are the most recent instance of BJP relinquishing the role of an active opposition for 59 months and picking it up with gusto in the 60th. It displayed less a commitment to Delhi and more to elections. It is a move fraught with risks. But to imagine BJP erred in its approach would be wrong. BJP played by its script. A script which is getting dog eared by the day as its strike rate is under threat and the party faces erosion of states. To understand what really contributed to the defeat of BJP in Delhi let us look at how the Delhi elections unfolded.
Dusting and rebooting BJP Delhi
BJP has been well aware of the stench in its Delhi unit. For over 20 years BJP Delhi has been at loggerheads in terms of petty factionalism, leadership conflicts, groupism and opaque ceilings. The same jaded faces have lorded over their micro fiefdoms to manage their mini factions in Municipal elections and the power that comes with it. BJP has managed to win the parliamentary and municipal elections but failed to have their legislative candidates. They have lost connect with the people, are seen as an arrogant and corrupt bunch with no zeal to solve the problems of Delhi. BJP’s mistake No. 1 was to not address the rot in its Delhi unit.
A leaderless party is a faceless fear.
BJP had over 10 years to identify and groom its second generation Delhi leaders. For a party that plans well into the future, BJP failed to do so. We have the example of Arvind Kejriwal who emerged out of nowhere and became a face to reckon with in Delhi’s political landscape. All through his journey, he was never singularly challenged by a young dynamic BJP leader backed by the party’s national leadership. Instead BJP chose to field its national leaders against Kejriwal to his delight and advantage. Initially PM Modi and currently HM Amit Shah have taken on Kejriwal. Kejriwal couldn’t have prayed for a brighter stroke of luck. In fact, he made every effort to pitch himself in that zone.
There has been increasing chatter nationally about BJP’s policy of winning states and foisting light weight state leaders as CM, a move resented by the voters as well as party’s state units. PM Modi has maintained rock solid loyalty from public while state units appear too infirm in comparison. To add to the equation is the internecine power struggle and heart burn that emerges from it. Delhi voters were not looking for an anointed CM, should BJP win. They wanted to know the groom well before the marriage. Not choosing a Delhi bred state leader who could connect with the aspirational Delhi voters was BJP’s mistake No 2.
60 months is NOT equal to 60 days
Over the 60 months of Arvind Kejriwal’s tenure, BJP almost allowed him a clean run. Admittedly, with its minuscule presence in the Delhi Assembly there was little BJP could do in the house. But that allowed BJP the opportunity of putting its famed opposition genes to use. BJP could have gone to the public at every given opportunity. Instead, it allowed Kejriwal to accuse Modi government of obstructionism and disfavour while really not delivering anything spectacular. BJP had 60 days to put Arvind Kejriwal and his juvenile government on the mat, but it chose to take him on only in the last 60 days, committing its mistake No. 3
A campaign too late
Till December end, the Delhi elections were considered a foregone conclusion. From rank and file to state-national leaders, the preparedness indicated BJP had chosen to throw in the towel even before the match. It is an intriguing question why BJP decided to take on AAP so late in the day. It is believed that serious planning for Delhi elections began only in the first week of January. Probably the defeat in Jharkhand at the tail of Maharashtra debacle pushed Delhi Elections up the priority of the national leadership.
With its state unit in disarray, rusted local leaders and dejected karyakartas, BJP decided to go all out. A call for all-hands-on-the-deck pushed BJP’s famed election machinery to contest a minuscule territory against a wily adversary playing in his backyard. This was akin to an under prepared Indian cricket team out to challenge Australia on its windy, bouncy wickets; definitely its mistake No 4.
Choosing to be a Goliath?
Putting up a brave fight in Delhi appears like a diktat that came in too late. Credit must go to Amit Shah- JP Nadda for mobilising the largest inflow of BJP leaders, managers and organisational heavyweights in a spirited show of aggression. One can appreciate the Hobson’s choice both had. With a leadership transition in progress (Between Amit Shah-JP Nadda), a redundant state unit, he had no choice but to call on his trusted lieutenants from outside. By one estimate, 4 Organisation General Secretaries, 6 Ex CMs, 8-10 state presidents and countless MPs and MLAs were tasked with mapping every nook and corner of Delhi.
However, this had a set of problems all its own. It created multiple power centres, decision making units and communication silos. The local units initially resented this airdropping of senior leaders but over a period of time aligned themselves and started functioning as a team.
What this created was very public, heavy duty, high visibility presence of BJP on the streets. Although it injected necessary enthusiasm in the BJP cadre and supporters it also created an unwanted David vs Goliath scenario for neutral, apolitical voters. Here were a bunch of heavy weights with no connection to Delhi working to throw out a local lad who was unequally matched.
By default, AAP and its local units became David to BJP's Goliath. And we know everybody has a soft corner for the underdog.
Selection of candidates
There has been a difference of opinion amongst people who know about the selection of candidates. I do believe, nobody knows more about the process of decision making than the parties involved. By a rough estimate of winnability being the criteria, BJP managed to select approximately 60% candidates with electoral winnability while 40% were selected on political considerations. It might be possible that those 40% were from “grade C’ constituencies where possibility of winning was meagre. However, it would be safe to assume that the selection of candidates was sub optimal.
This was also evident from the absence of heavy weights in the electoral fray. Academically, imagine if the candidate list included Dr Harshvardhan, Manoj Tiwari, Vijay Goel, Meenakshi Lekhi and Parvesh Singh Verma. The kickoff to the elections would be with leaders personally invested in the outcome. It would have mobilised the local karyakartas as their lifelines would have been on the chopping block. Nonetheless, this is a matter of conjecture and for worthier political acumen to dwell upon.
Kejriwal’s bulwark against BJP: Freebies and more.
Unable to deliver on his loftier electoral promises like marshals in buses, 15 lac CCTV cameras, 500 schools/colleges and so on, Kejriwal opted for the Shivraj Chouhan model of delivery. It had worked for him in 2015 too.
By an estimation 30 lac household (75lac voters) fell into the bracket of less than 200 units of free electricity. It is reported they have been receiving a Nil Electricity Bill for many months now. Thats a sizeable contribution to their average monthly cash savings. Electorally, this was freebies in the bag, not promises.
Free rides for women, free tirth yatra for elders etc also played their role in keeping Kejriwal’s 2015 voters cemented. Now compare this with BJPs spread of freebies, which was bigger and BJP had no option but to extend them.
The difference lay in ‘a bird in hand is better than two in the bush’. AAP prevailed here.
The tactical absence of Congress
The dwindling vote share of Congress from the time Shiela Dikshit exited Delhi politics should have struck to BJP. It would have been smart of BJP to ween away those voters. With nobody to peg themselves to, these voters frittered away to both sides of the spectrum with an erosion of about 8-10%. It can be assumed that ideological divergence would have pushed most of them towards AAP. In the current elections, Congress as a party has displayed conspicuous lack of application. It sent a tacit message to its voters to consolidate behind AAP to harm BJP. This myopic move, drawn from its leadership’s visceral hatred for BJP may cost it dearly in the days to come.
An improved Kejriwal
With all the restraint at his command and to the relief of voters, Kejriwal appeared to have matured as a politician. He displayed a tight grip on his emotions, was measured in his utterances, stayed clear of the shrill, slanging matches he was known for and read entirely from the script. Ask him anything and he would talk of the things that rung a bell with the voters. Electricity, water, tirthayatra, schools, clinics. This is the evolution of Arvind Kejriwal 2.0 that makes him ready for larger space on the political horizon.
Kejriwal lured them with Shaheen Bagh. BJP lapped it up.
Setting the agenda is the single most important initiative in an electoral battle. With the CAA protests sizzling across the country, AAP and its allies erected Delhi’s own battle field. The Shaheen Bagh protests, with continuous media coverage and frenzy, propelled it to the national mainstream.
The signature of India Against Corruption and the Anna Andolan was evident in they way Shaheen Bagh was organised and captured national visibility. It was a thought out move with zero spontaneity.
That was the lure AAP presented to BJP. It hid a poisoned hook under its shiny plume. BJP, already late into the arena with very little to show for its Delhi efforts, no exciting vision for future of Delhi and struggling to win over the poor in a fight for freebies lapped up the lure. Now the hook was set. And agenda was squarely in the hands of Kejriwal.
Incremental? What incremental?
Elections in democracy are about adding incremental votes. It is said seats are won on the election day but vote shares are won 24x7x365. With Shaheen Bagh becoming the point of reckoning, the lines were drawn.
Muslims + Liberal + Poor vs Nationalism consolidated
It is a given that in times of Hindu-Muslim conflict, Muslims mobilise and consolidate first and fast. Hindu consolidation begins slowly and takes a longer time to peak. Kejriwal had gauged this accurately to peak muslim consolidation right into the elections. BJP had no choice but to hasten the process of Hindu consolidation to get to peak it in time. The high decibel aggression of Amit Shah without losing a minute in bringing Shaheen Bagh to focus was a fait accompli. He was fighting for a Hindu backlash in a city where a large chunk likes to play liberal. Kejriwal was clear that he wanted nationalist (read BJP) consolidation not a reverse Hindu consolidation. To Amit Shah’s advantage, emergence of Hard Muslim utterances of Sharjil Imam and Amanatullah variety, created the reason for not just nationalists but also the Hindus to consolidate against him. Vary of a Hindu backlash, Arvind Kejriwal was quick to distance himself from Shaheen Bagh while letting Manish Sisodia support it in a cheeky display of brazen ambiguity.
However, Kejriwal made all efforts to dilute the reverse Hindu polarisation by citing Hanuman Chalisa on TV with fawning anchors in tow. Following it up with his religious tweets in a subliminal act of deceit. But by then, part of the damage was done.
Let’s come to the electoral arithmetic of polarisation. With Hindu-Muslim becoming the leitmotif of Delhi elections, BJP had little to gain. The nationalist Hindu voters were already behind them. At best, this polarisation ensured that entire core vote of BJP voted. With BJP’s apathy for Delhi, earlier there was a fear of even its core voters not coming out to vote. Amit Shah’s high decibel campaign ensured that the core voter came out and also rallied behind him nationally.
What it did not do was get substantial incremental votes.
BJP crosses the victory line with its core voters AND incremental voters. Without the incremental votes it languishes in the Advani era.
Nationally, PM Modi and team have been mindful of gaining incremental votes of the poor sections and the aspirational voters. In Delhi, with the poor class hooked to AAP’s freebies, naive hooked to Arvind’s theatrics, aspirational class being averse to hard Hindutva, there really were no incremental votes to woo.
BJP was confined to its core vote bank and nothing much.
Soft Hindutva vs Hard Hindutva
Both parties managed to achieve a highly charged, polarised atmosphere. However, this polarisation was more in favour of AAP with muslims rallying behind it. It is an established psychographic conclusion that a large part of Delhi is averse to hard Hindutva. Probably, it has to do with the entrepreneurial mindset of Delhi which avoids situations of commercial inactivity. Or possibly the aspirational urgency of the youngsters who connect more to the idea of a liberal village than to the idea of civilisational majesty. With the Sharjeel Imam episode it was impossible for BJP not to rebut. But rebuttal pushed BJP into the Hard Hindutva zone while Kejriwal went about singing Hanuman Chalisa to soften Hindus. In BJP’s defence, it was not a choice they made. It was a decision thrust upon them by circumstances.
Feet-in-the-street vs Vanishing volunteers
Till 2015 and beyond, AAP had a bubbling presence of committed volunteer who travelled across the world to participate in this “Lets change India” experiment. However, with realpolitik taking over, Arvind Kejriwal practised what any dyed in wool politician would. He consolidated his stranglehold over his fledgling party. Challengers and dissenters were quickly shown the door. Volunteers were now a burden of expectations and resources. He swiftly displayed a cold shoulder and most of the naive volunteers withdrew with their innocence hurt. It did not matter much to Arvind then, because running the government hardly required anybody looking over his shoulders.
This is where Amit Shah-JP Nadda and his team had a clean sweep. With his mammoth machine in action, core voters energised, he had no shortage of feet on the street. In the classic mould of Sangh mobilisation, the BJP workers went door to door, cross checking on their voters and ensured voting peaked tactically in identified constituencies. The much talked about surge voting of 4pm onwards was the outcome of BJP’s untiring efforts to bring their lazy and latent supporters to the voting machines. Raising its vote share from 6.37% over 2015.
Chemistry vs Arithmetic
There is now no doubt that Kejriwal walked away with the chemistry in these elections. He managed to connect with Delhi as their own person, to give respectability to freebies, adopted the mantle of the eldest son, his residual image of a man trying to do better for Delhi and above all an underdog defending his terrain from BJP heavyweights endeared him to Delhi. Where he lost was with nationalists who pegged him with the Shaheen Bagh crowd and considered him a potential threat to national interests.
BJP on the other hand had limited sentiment going for it. The Hindu backlash, though limited, along with nationalism under threat and belligerent Islamism ensured that BJP’s captive vote bank poured out in numbers. Aided with tactical voting in identified seats, feet on the street management countered Kejriwal’s chemistry with its own brand of comprehensive arithmetic.
In the end, however, arithmetic proved woefully short of chemistry.
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Special CBI Court sentences ex-Jharkhand CM to 3 year jail term
Special CBI Court, New Delhi: A Special CBI Court of the Patiala House Courts has held former Jharkhand Chief Minister Madhu Koda, ex-Coal Secretary H.C. Gupta and others guilty in coal block allocation scam.
Special CBI Court Judge Bharat Parashar sentenced them to 3 years of rigorous imprisonment and slapped a fine of Rs. 50 lakhs on the Kolkata based Vini Iron & Steel Udyog Limited, Rs. 5,00,000 on Koda and a sum of Rs. 1,00, 000 on Gupta.
The present case is related to irregularities in the allocation of Rajhara North Coal Block in Jharkhand to Vini Iron & Steel Udyog Limited, even when it did not meet the criteria for the allocation.
The Court while holding the former government officers guilty of criminal misconduct by a public servant under Section 13(1)(d)(iii) r/w Section 13(2) of the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988 observed that, “… white collar crimes are in fact more dangerous to the society than ordinary crimes, firstly, because the financial losses are much higher, and, secondly, because of the damages inflicted on public morale.” [CBI v. M/s Vini Iron & Steel Udyog Limited, CC No. 79/16, decided on 16.12.2017]
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Schools cannot bar students from taking board exams due to non- payment of fees: Jharkhand CM - education
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Schools cannot bar students from taking board exams due to non- payment of fees: Jharkhand CM - education
Jharkhand Chief Minister Hemant Soren on Monday directed all the school managements in the state not to prevent any student from appearing in Class 10 and 12 board examinations due to non-payment of fees, an official release issued here said.
His directive came after several such incidents, where students defaulting on payment of fees were not allowed to sit for the exams, were reported from across the state in the past.
Chairing a meeting of the Education and Literacy department, Soren asked the officials to ensure that such incidents are not repeated during the upcoming board examinations, it said.
The chief minister said the rule applies to all public, private and Coal India Limited-run schools, the release added.
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New chapter for young Jharkhand as JMM-led alliance’s rule begins - assembly elections
Since Monday morning, scores of Jharkhand Mukti Morcha (JMM) supporters had gathered outside his Ranchi house, distributing sweets to celebrate the Jharkhand election results. Hemant Soren didn’t want to jump the gun and waited for the lead to stabilise. As it became clear that the Opposition alliance comprising the JMM, Congress and the Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD) was headed for a comfortable victory, 44-year-old Soren drove down to his father Shibu Soren’s residence less than a kilometre away to seek his blessings.The photographs were quickly put out. In one, he was touching 75-year-old Shibu Soren’s feet. In a video, the father and son could be seen taking a walk around in the garden. In a third, Shibu Soren’s wife Kalpana Soren joined them.It was a day of celebrations for JMM leaders and workers, who thronged the streets of Ranchi and other cities with party flags and distributed sweets. Celebrations broke out in the Congress and the RJD camps as well.Later at a press conference, JMM working president Soren, the chief ministerial candidate of the alliance, said, “We will sit with the alliance partners and decide the course of action.” He thanked his father, RJD leader Lalu Prasad, and Congress leaders Sonia Gandhi, Rahul Gandhi and Priyanka Gandhi Vadra, among others.The Opposition alliance described the results as the beginning of a “new chapter”, and the Congress linked the mandate to the Citizenship Amendment Act and the National Register of Citizens. It said the people have demolished “arrogance” of the BJP. The BJP, however, attributed its defeat to local issues and “internal strife” in the state.Prime Minister Narendra Modi congratulated Soren for the victory and extended his best wishes to the alliance. Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) president Amit Shah said his party respects the mandate of voters and also expressed his gratitude to the people of Jharkhand for giving the BJP a chance to govern the state for five years.BJP spokesperson GVL Narasimha Rao attributed the party’s loss in Jharkhand to “local issues”, and said “internal strife” also appeared to have a significant fallout. “Inability of local leadership to convince the electorate for repeat of the mandate and internal strife within the party also appeared to have a significant fall out. A detailed analysis will be done,” he said.Outgoing Jharkhand CM Raghubar Das took responsibility for the election outcome, saying it was his defeat, and not of the BJP. Later in the day, Das submitted his resignation to the governor. “I met Governor Droupadi Murmu and submitted my resignation. The governor asked me to be caretaker CM till the new government is formed,” Das told reporters after coming out of the Raj Bhavan in Ranchi.The BJP and the All Jharkhand Students Union, or the AJSU party, which had been in alliance since the creation of the state 19 years ago, failed to reach a seat-sharing formula and fought separately.Das, whose government is first one to complete five years in the state, said, “I have worked for the development of Jharkhand, providing electricity, roads and other schemes, covering every section of the society. In future also, I will serve as a BJP worker as party has always been working for the building of nation.”Former Congress president Rahul Gandhi congratulated his party, coalition partners and workers on the decisive victory of the alliance in Jharkhand, while party general secretary Priyanka Gandhi Vadra said the people want to hear from the government on employment, bread, water, land, farming and trade.“Today the public’s answer has come. Congratulations to all the members of the grand alliance. Congratulations to Hemant Soren. Congratulations and love to the Congress workers,” she said in a tweet in Hindi.Significantly, Das also said the BJP’s failure to cling on to the alliance with the AJSU party and the opposition parties’ ability to keep their coalition intact are the reasons for the loss in the assembly election. “Our alliance could not happen while the opposition coalition remained intact. The party will review all the points (that led to the defeat) and try to plug the loopholes,” he told reporters after submitting his resignation letter to the governor.With agency inputs Read the full article
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