RJD's Tejashwi Yadav was on Thursday elected the leader of the Grand Alliance legislature party and promptly hit out at the NDA, claiming it won the assembly elections through "deceit".
Addressing a press conference, Yadav mocked Chief Minister Nitish Kumar, whose JD(U) has been relegated to the third position in terms of seat tally, and wondered whether the latter would "heed his conscience and give up his attachment to the chair".
He was obviously referring to Kumar resigning and snapping ties with the Grand Alliance before returning to the NDA fold in 2017 after Tejashwi's name had cropped up in a money laundering case. Kumar had then said he was stepping down after heeding his conscience (atma ki awaaz).
Yadav claimed the people's mandate was for a change but it was manipulated.
"It was undoubtedly a mandate for change. The NDA won by dhan, bal and chhal (money, muscle power and deceit," he alleged.
Asked whether the Mahagathbandhan would try to muster numbers to form its own government, he said, "We will go to the people who gave the mandate. If they express such a wish we will act accordingly."
Quoting election data, he guaranteed the NDA got just 12,270 votes more than the
Mahagathbandhan.
"How might it convert into their triumph in 15 a larger number of seats than us? We accept that had the counting of votes been reasonable, we would have gotten back with a count of in excess of 130 seats," said Yadav, whose alliance has won 110 seats, 12 not exactly the enchantment figure of 122. The NDA secured 125 seats.
He said his alliance will keep in touch with the Election Commission and point out the "disparities".
"In endless bodies electorate, postal voting forms were included eventually and not toward the start of counting which the standard is. Besides, there were seats where upwards of 900 postal polling forms were nullified," the RJD leader alleged.
"We suspect this was done to offset the support we had received from a large number of servicemen who were moved by our commitment to one rank, one pension scheme. We demand recounting of postal ballots in all such constituencies and the process be video graphed," Yadav asserted.
The 31-year-old former deputy chief minister alleged that errant polling officials had acted like a "prakoshth" (cell) of the BJP, and replied in the affirmative when asked if legal remedy could be explored if the EC did not satisfactorily address the concerns.