Highlights
- Yadav plans to file his nomination papers on June 15
- He had filed his nomination papers in 2017 as well
- Yadav's nomination was rejected the last time due to the lack of adequate number of proposers
The Presidential election that will decide the successor of President Ram Nath Kovind is scheduled to take place on July 18. The Election Commission has already begun the nomination process and set June 29 as the last date for nomination. Lalu Prasad Yadav plans to throw his hat in the ring, firmly believing that there must be a Bihari in the contest.
However, here is the twist, Yadav is not the Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD) chief, but a resident of the Saran district. Yadav claims to have already booked a flight ticket to Delhi where he proposes to file his nomination papers on June 15.
He had filed his nomination papers in 2017 as well when the contest was between the then Bihar Governor Ram Nath Kovind, who went on to win, and former Lok Sabha Speaker Meira Kumar, who was also a native of the soil.
“My papers got rejected last time since these were not endorsed by an adequate number of proposers. This time, I am better prepared”, Yadav told PTI over phone. A resident of Yadav Rahimpur village in Marhaura assembly segment of Saran, Yadav is barely 42, young enough to be a son of the RJD president, though, like the latter, he too takes care of a large family.
“I practise agriculture for a living and engage in social work. I have seven children. My eldest daughter is married,” said Yadav. It is not surprising that acquaintances call him “dharti pakad” (one who clings on to the earth), an epithet that has come to be associated, in India’s political lexicon, with those who like to contest elections for the sake of thrill and publicity.
Yadav takes the derision on his chin and recalls with pride that the RJD supremo had “blamed me for the defeat of his wife Rabri Devi in 2014 Lok Sabha polls”. Rabri Devi, a former chief minister herself, had contested from Saran which was previously represented by her husband who got disqualified in 2013 following his conviction in the fodder scam.
She lost to the BJP’s Rajiv Pratap Rudy, who rode the Narendra Modi wave, by a margin of around 50,000 votes. Lalu Prasad Yadav polled less than 10,000 votes and forfeited his deposit.
Undeterred, Yadav again jumped into the fray in 2019 and polled about six thousand votes. "I keep trying my luck, from Panchayats to Presidentship. If nothing else, I may come to hold the record for contesting the maximum number of elections,” he said with a deadpan expression.
(With PTI inputs)
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