Kumar, who recently jettisoned Lalu Prasad's RJD and went back to the NDA fold after a 4-year hiatus, forming a coalition government with BJP and Ram Vilas Paswan's LJP, also praised Narendra Modi, saying "nobody has the strength to take on the prime minister."
"There were corruption charges and cases were filed by the CBI (against Lalu Prasad and family). I had only told them to come out with proper answers. Instead, they made fun of me saying whether I was a CBI official or the police," he told a press conference.
Kumar also defended himself against criticism over breaking a secularist alliance. "What does secularism mean? Does secularism mean making property worth thousands of crore of rupees?" he asked.
Meanwhile, the Patna High Court today dismissed two PILs challenging the formation of a new government by Nitish Kumar, saying the court's intervention was no longer required after the floor test in the state Assembly.
Kumar had comfortably won the confidence vote 131-108 on Friday.
Even as Kumar defended his decision of aligning with the BJP, JD(U) veteran Sharad Yadav voiced his disapproval, saying the mandate in the 2015 Assembly polls was for the grand alliance. He termed the development "unpleasant" and "unfortunate".
"The situation is very unpleasant to us... It is unfortunate that the coalition has been broken. People's mandate was not for it. Bihar's 11 crore people had endorsed our alliance," Yadav told reporters outside Parliament.
Kumar, on the other hand, played down Yadav's views, saying people have different opinions in a democracy and the party leaders would get to air them at the JD(U)'s national executive meeting in Patna on August 19.
Addressing a press conference in Patna, he said the Bihar unit of the party had endorsed the decision to snap ties with the RJD and join hands with the BJP.
In Lucknow, BJP chief Amit Shah dismissed allegations of his party engineering splits and defections in rival political organisations.
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