Patna: A late night meeting between the AICC in-charge for Bihar Shaktisinh Gohil and Jan Adhikar Party chief Rajesh Ranjan alias Pappu Yadav triggered political ripples Monday within the Congress party and its ally, Lalu Prasad's Rashtriya Janata Dal.
Yadav, who represents the Madhepura Lok Sabha seat, met Gohil at the Sadaqat Ashram, the state Congress headquarters, late on Sunday night.
Speaking to media after the meeting, Gohil sought to downplay it as a courtesy call by Yadav, whose wife Ranjeet Ranjan is a Congress MP.
When contacted for a comment, a close aide of Yadav said he was not available for a response as he was addressing a party workers meeting at Khagaria.
The development, however, triggered speculations about the Congress toying with the idea of some sort of understanding with Yadav, who has had a troubled relationship with Lalu Prasad since the 1990s, for the Lok Sabha polls.
In the 2014 general elections, Prasad, who was then disqualified from contesting elections following conviction in a fodder scam case, had tried to bury the hatchet by giving a party ticket to Yadav, who had returned to electoral politics upon his acquittal in a case relating to the murder of CPI (M) leader Ajit Sarkar in Purnea district.
Yadav, who has a considerable following in the Kosi region, wrested Madhepura by a comfortable margin from Sharad Yadav, who was in the JD(U) then, and had represented the Lok Sabha seat a number of times.
Differences between the controversial politician and the RJD supremo, however, soon came to the fore and Yadav was suspended in 2015 for anti-party activities.
The Madhepura MP, thereafter, went on to form his own outfit Jan Adhikar Party, which has kept political pundits guessing by virtue of its ambivalence towards the ruling NDA as well as opposition groupings.
Yadav's meeting with Gohil, however, drew angry reaction from the RJD.
Its MLA and spokesman Bhai Virendra said the Mahagathbandhan comprises the RJD, the Congress and the Hindustani Awam Morcha. Any Decision with regard to inclusion of any new constituent cannot be taken by the Congress alone, he said.
The RJD MLA's reaction appeared to be in sync with the view expressed by party heir apparent Tejashwi Yadav, who had recently said that while efforts were on to rope in NDA constituents like the Rashtriya Lok Samata Party headed by Union minister Upendra Kushwaha, there was no place for Pappu Yadav in the Grand Alliance.
The Hindustani Awam Morcha, headed by former Chief Minister Jitan Ram Manjhi, also came out in support of the RJD's stand with its spokesman Danish Rizwan saying in a statement that people like Pappu Yadav, who have
been opposing Tejashwi, can have no place in the Mahagathbandhan.
The development also appears to have baffled the state unit of the Congress as one of its senior leaders, speaking on condition of anonymity, wondered why Gohil met Yadav without presence of any other prominent BPCC leader.