'First Step Towards Oppn Unity': Sharad Yadav's LJD Party Merges with Lalu's RJD After 25 Years
'First Step Towards Oppn Unity': Sharad Yadav's LJD Party Merges with Lalu's RJD After 25 Years
Yadav's decision to merge his party marks his coming together with Lalu Prasad after more than three decades, with both leaders seen to be at a fag end of their political career

Days after making the announcement of a possible coalescence, former Union minister Sharad Yadav on Sunday merged his Loktantrik Janata Dal (LJD) with Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD) led by Lalu Prasad Yadav at the former’s residence in Delhi.

Soon after the development, Yadav, while speaking to the media, called the move the “first step towards a united opposition. “Merger of our party with RJD is first step towards opposition unity,” he said.

“It’s imperative that whole opposition gets united across India to defeat BJP. As of now, unification is our priority, it’ll be only after that we would think about who’ll lead the united opposition,” he told news agency ANI.

On March 16, Yadav announced that his party LJD will merge with Rashtriya Janata Dal on March 20 as part of his efforts to unite various offshoots of the erstwhile Janata Dal.

Keeping low for health reasons, Yadav’s decision to merge his party, which could never make its presence felt since its launch after he parted ways with Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar’s JD(U), marks his coming together with Lalu Prasad after more than three decades, with both leaders seen to be at a fag end of their political career.

RJD chief Lalu Prasad had quit Janata Dal in 1997 to form his own party over his differences with its leadership as the probe against fodder scam, in which he was a main accused, gathered pace. Sharad Yadav was then seen as his rival within the Janata Dal, and he later joined with Kumar to end RJD’s 15-year reign in Bihar in 2005.

“This step (merger) has been necessitated as an initiative of my regular efforts for bringing together scattered Janata parivar in view of the current political situation in the country,” Sharad Yadav (74) said in a statement, claiming the BJP government has been a failure and people are looking for a strong opposition.

Noting that the Janata Dal alone had 143 seats in Lok Sabha in 1989, he said the agenda for social justice has lost its pace with the disintegration of the party over the years, and this needs to be revived, he said. Sharad Yadav’s daughter had fought the 2020 assembly polls in Bihar on a RJD ticket but lost. The need of the hour is that all like-minded parties should come together to build up strong opposition, Yadav said.

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