RLSP chief and Union Minister Upendra Kushwaha also claimed that with Mulayam Singh Yadav's Samajwadi Party and NCP walking out of the grand alliance, BJP-led NDA was bound to benefit.
Downplaying his party's stand that BJP contest only 102 of the state's 243 assembly seats leaving the rest for allies, Kushwaha said,"There was a demand, which we had aired in past. Now the talks are on. So it won't be appropriate to talk on this subject outside.
Asked whether NDA did the right thing in plunging the poll arena without announcing its chief ministerial candidate when the rival secular alliance had a seasoned campaigner in Nitish Kumar, he said,"It was the best option."
"Opting to fight the election under Modi's leadership was the best option and we went for that. There is no challenge... Nitish is not a challenge for NDA today," he said.
When asked whether he expects the BJP to remain open to making even a non-BJP leader the Chief Minister, he said," Right now this is not the subject in the election. NDA has decided that election in Bihar will be fought under the leadership of Narendra Modi. This issue will be looked at when the time for it comes."
Kushwaha also said BJP had "no say" in running the government when it was an alliance partner of JD(U).
Kushwaha, a prominent leader of the Koiri community, which constitutes around five per cent of the electorate, trashed suggestions in the media that the Samajwadi Party walked out of the secular alliance in Bihar at BJP's bidding and said it was the result of the "arrogance" of Nitish Kumar.
He said the exit of Sharad Pawar's NCP and the decision of the Left to contest separately would benefit the NDA.
Kushwaha said after the exit of SP and NCP, the secular alliance should removed the prefix "maha" (grand) as the JD(U)-RJD-Congress combination can no longer be called a "grand alliance".
The Union Minister said the assembly polls in Bihar will be centred around development and social justice.
"Both themes will matter in Bihar polls. But People, especially the youth, are more focused on development this time.
Asked whether the coming together of Nitish and Lalu, who had contested the Lok Sabha polls separately, will not benefit their alliance, Kushwaha said,"Politics does no go like simple mathematics that if two entities got 10 and 15 votes separately, they will get 25 when they are together.
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