Minor parties in the alliances have already started hinting at it and made it known that out of the box thinking is needed over the issue for the prestigious battle that has the potential to change the national scene dominated by Narendra Modi-led BJP for the past more than one year.
The talk in the Nitish Kumar-led alliance is that RJD chief Lalu Prasad is taking his own time to decide on seat sharing for the 243-member Assembly whatever may be the public posturing. RJD and JD(U) have to first firm up the seat allocation among themselves and later the share of minor players will be decided.
Congress leaders say in private that Rahul Gandhi could go in for a tough bargain to avoid any raw deal to the party.
Sharad Pawar's NCP also held its national convention in Patna last month to pitch for a secular alliance comprising the JD-U, RJD, Congress and NCP.
BJP too is facing a challenging task. Union Minister Upendra Kushwaha, whose Rashtriya Lok Samata Party is part of the BJP-led NDA, has already suggested that the seat sharing formula during the Lok Sabha polls does not hold good for the coming Assembly polls. Kushwaha had been an ally of Nitish Kumar till a few years back.
RLSP wants to contest 67 seats in the election, likely to be held in September-October this year.
While Union Minister Ram Vilas Paswan of LJP has been toeing a pro-BJP line on the way ahead in Bihar, seat-sharing remains a ticklish issue with former Chief Minister Jitan Ram Manjhi joining the alliance and Pappu Yadav too parting ways with Lalu Prasad.
The smaller parties are sending home the message that if the dominant partners-BJP on one side and RJD and JD-U on the other failed to take everyone on board, they would be the ultimate loser.
Citing an instance, the leader, who declined to be identified, said that in the Telangana Assembly polls last year, Congress alliance with the AIMIM was not beneficial for the party as the Asaduddin Owaisi led party did not part with a single strong seat.
The political scene in the state has turned topsy turvy since the last Assembly polls in 2010 with friends turning foes and vice versa.
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