N.K. Singh quits JD(U), may join BJP

March 21, 2014 04:50 pm | Updated May 19, 2016 10:26 am IST - New Delhi

A file photo of N.K. Singh. Photo: Ahsoke Chakrabarty

A file photo of N.K. Singh. Photo: Ahsoke Chakrabarty

N.K. Singh, a Janata Dal (United) MP, on Friday quit the party amidst indications that he would join BJP.

73-year-old Singh, a former bureaucrat whose term in the Rajya Sabha is coming to an end shortly, had joined the JD(U) and was elected on the party ticket to the house of elders.

He has written a letter to Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar conveying his decision to quit and the reasons for it but refused to disclose them.

Mr. Singh expressed disappointment over the current situation in Bihar, saying ever since JD(U) broke ties with BJP last year the issue of development has taken a back seat.

He said he had told the Chief Minister that his government was now more focussed on political survival rather than development of the State.

Mr. Singh said he had joined the JD(U) at a time when the government was involved in spectacular work on the matrix of development in Bihar.

As speculation was rife that he could join BJP, he admitted that he has held discussions with senior leaders of the party. He recalled his working under former Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee in the PMO and said strong foundations for economic development were laid then.

Outgoing JD(U) member of Rajya Sabha N.K. Singh on Tuesday lodged a strong note of dissent against party leader Nitish Kumar by saying that it was the NDA as a whole and not the Bihar CM alone who could be given credit for the recent recovery of the State.

He gave indications of his rift with Mr. Kumar when he delivered his farewell address in the Rajya Sabha last month, when he said the credit for far-reaching economic and social changes in Bihar cannot be given to one person or party.

“It is the outcome of the joint efforts of the NDA to which party (BJP) was an alliance partner till June last year. And the collective political leadership of both the parties played a crucial role in bringing about these far reaching changes,” he had said.

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