Its leaders accuse their rivals of having engineered such electoral tactics, to confuse voters. “Our supporters know our party names and election symbols. But, there is always a possibility of a few hundred getting confused and voting for these parties. This becomes crucial in a close contest,” a JD (U) leader said.
Some of these parties, mostly debutantes, are Janata Dal Rashtravadi, Garib Janata Dal (Secular), National Janata Party and Hind Congress Party.
The first phase of the polls is slated for October 12. It will see voting in 49 seats across 10 districts. Nearly all these 'namesake' parties have fielded candidates on these seats. The alliance parties see a pattern in how several of its rebel candidates are either contesting on tickets of parties like the Samajwadi Party or the newcomer Jan Adhikar Party (Loktantrik).
ALSO READ: Bihar Polls: Sonia, Rahul to address nearly 20 rallies
RJD rebels Ajay Kumar Bulganin and Sunil Kumar Puspam are contesting on this party ticket from Moihuddinagar and Hasanpur seats in Samastipur. Both were runners-up from their respective seats in the 2010 assembly polls. In Bhagalpur’s Nathnagar, Abu Qaisar of RJD, runner-up to the sitting JD (U) MLA in 2010, has also decided to contest on the ticket of the Jan Adhikar Party (Loktantrik). In Kahalgaon, Shobhakant Mandal has crossed over from RJD to SP after the ‘grand alliance’ decided the Congress would contest the seat in the coming elections. There are over a dozen such instances in the 49 seats going to the polls on October 12.
BJP plans Modi blitz
Prime Minister Narendra Modi is scheduled to address at least 20 public rallies, if not more, in Bihar from Friday to November 3. He will start his series of rallies from Banka on Mahatma Gandhi’s birth anniversary on October 2. Of the five seats in Banka district, the BJP has a sitting MLA in only one. On Tuesday, Chief Minister and JD(U) leader Nitish Kumar was shown slippers and black flags during a rally in Nawada. “I know who you people are. You are also very less in numbers. The better course for you is to leave this place,” he told them after they chanted ‘Modi, Modi’. BJP President Amit Shah came to Patna on Tuesday. He is slated to spend all his time in Bihar until the last phase concludes, on November 5. Shah plans to address nine meetings of party workers, drawn from 38 districts of the state, in the coming days. Union ministers Radha Mohan Singh, Ananth Kumar, Dharmendra Pradhan, Niranjan Jyoti, J P Nadda, Santosh Gangwar, Narendra Singh Tomar and Ram Kirpal Yadav were in Bihar to address rallies on Tuesday. Home Minister Rajnath Singh, External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj, Madhya Pradesh CM Shivraj Singh Chouhan and Chhattisgarh CM Raman Singh are also slated to address rallies.
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