Key Points

Prashant Kishor's newly formed Jan Suraaj Party is experiencing its first significant internal challenge after releasing its candidate list for Bihar Assembly elections. Disgruntled party workers protested at the headquarters, expressing disappointment over ticket allocation. Senior leaders like Pushpa Singh publicly criticized the selection process, claiming unfair distribution. Kishor defended the choices, emphasizing the party's larger goal of systemic change in Bihar.

Key Points: Prashant Kishor's Jan Suraaj Faces First Major Party Rebellion

  • First major internal rebellion in newly formed Jan Suraaj Party
  • Candidates list triggers protests at party headquarters
  • Allegations of unfair ticket distribution emerge
  • Kishor defends selection process as part of systemic change strategy
2 min read

'Left all parties for Jan Suraaj': Prashant Kishor faces rebellion after announcement of candidate list

Election strategist Prashant Kishor confronts internal conflict after releasing Bihar poll candidates, sparking protests and dissent within Jan Suraaj Party

"We left all parties and trusted Prashant Kishor and Jan Suraaj - Pushpa Singh"

Patna, Oct 9

The Jan Suraaj Party, led by election strategist-turned-politician Prashant Kishor, faced its first major internal rebellion on Thursday after releasing its maiden list of 51 candidates for the upcoming Bihar Assembly elections.

Soon after the list was announced, protests erupted at the party headquarters in Patna.

Several disgruntled workers, upset over being denied tickets, raised slogans and created a ruckus.

Senior party leaders had to intervene to calm the situation.

The discontent centred largely on allegations of unfair ticket distribution.

Pushpa Singh, a prominent leader of Jan Suraaj, publicly expressed her disappointment.

"We left all parties and trusted Prashant Kishor and Jan Suraaj. I have been with him since his Padyatra began. Earlier, it was said that the one who worked hardest would get the ticket, but the person chosen has not even visited Mashrak village. Justice has not been served -- the ticket was given to a leader who is not visible on the ground," said Pushpa Singh.

Reacting to the protests, Prashant Kishor defended the selection process, emphasising that the list was made keeping in view the party's larger vision of system change in Bihar.

"There may be resentment because some workers did not receive tickets, but only 243 people can contest the elections. The list has been prepared keeping in mind our goal of systemic change in Bihar," he said.

The tension intensified in Saran district, where Jan Suraaj fielded Shravan Kumar Mahato from Baniyapur, prompting Pushpa Singh to claim that local people would not bless anyone else with victory except her.

Similar anger was reported in Benipatti, where the nomination of Mohammad Parvez Alam caused discontent among supporters of Awadh Kishore Jha, who alleged that Jha's name had long been considered but was suddenly replaced.

According to the official list, Jan Suraaj has announced candidates for seven reserved and 44 general, OBC, EBC and minority seats. The party has tried to maintain a caste balance, fielding the candidates.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Prashant Kishor needs to understand that "system change" begins with fair internal processes. Disappointing to see rebellion so early in the journey. Hope they resolve this amicably.
A
Arjun K
PK's vision is good but execution seems flawed. When workers leave established parties for you, you owe them transparency in ticket distribution. This rebellion could have been avoided with better communication.
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Sarah B
As an observer, this looks like typical political drama. Every new party faces these challenges. What matters is how Prashant Kishor handles this crisis - with humility or arrogance.
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Vikram M
The caste balance mentioned in the article shows they're still playing identity politics. Wasn't Jan Suraaj supposed to be above all this? Feeling disillusioned. 😔
M
Michael C
Pushpa Singh's emotional statement hits hard. When local workers feel betrayed, the party loses its grassroots connection. Hope PK learns from this and creates a more democratic process.

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