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          New Delhi: The Bihar outcome has confirmed the pre-poll conventional wisdom   about Nitish Kumar's victory based on his successes on the development and   law-and-order fronts. But what makes the chief minister stand out from his other   equally successful political colleagues like Narendra Modi, Mayawati and Naveen   Patnaik is the inclusive nature of his politics.   
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	  As a result, although the three others have also led their parties to   comfortable victories in their states, it is only Nitish Kumar who is being   regarded as a possible prime ministerial candidate in 2014. While Modi carries   the millstone of the 2002 riots round his neck, Mayawati is seen as being too   obsessed with her own caste, the Dalits, and Patnaik is seemingly still tainted   by his earlier association with the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). In contrast,   the new star of Bihar has emerged with a remarkably clean record on all these   counts. Although Nitish Kumar, too, has the BJP as an ally, he has made it abundantly   clear that he has nothing to do with its pro-Hindu agenda. His difference in   this respect from Patnaik is obvious. The latter retained his partnership with   the BJP till the anti-Christian riots in Kandhamal left him with no alternative   but to break his ties. Nitish Kumar, on the other hand, ensured that Bihar   remained riot-free throughout the last five years. What is more, he went out of his way to demonstrate his sensitiveness to   minority apprehensions by telling the BJP that neither Modi nor Varun Gandhi   could campaign in Bihar. The meekness with which the BJP accepted this diktat   evidently contributed a great deal towards reassuring the Muslims. As a result,   Nitish Kumar was able to break the longstanding Muslim-Yadav (MY) alliance which   used to be the trump card of Lalu Prasad's Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD). So, it wasn't only Lalu Prasad's abysmal failure on the development front   during his 15 years in power which led to his downfall. Nitish Kumar also   successfully eroded the basis of the RJD's electoral advantage by, first,   winning over a section of the Muslims and, secondly, by retaining the support of   the upper castes as well via the BJP. It was clever tactics where the BJP was   made to act strictly in accordance with the script written by Nitish Kumar by   excluding the minority-baiters and also keeping the upper castes on board. It is this inclusive approach, which partly replicates the Congress's earlier   Brahmin-Harijan-Muslim alliance, which is Nitish Kumar's distinguishing feature.   It also marks his difference from Mayawati, whose Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) had   scored an even more spectacular victory by securing a single-party majority in   Uttar Pradesh in 2007, but who has since faded away because of her obsessive   penchant for erecting statues of herself and other Dalit icons. In contrast, the entire focus of Nitish Kumar's attention was on building   roads, jailing anti-social elements and encouraging the education of girls by   providing them with school uniforms and cycles - the three areas (out of many)   which Lalu Prasad had neglected. Not surprisingly, there has been a massive   response to his appeal to the voters to support the 'doer'. The outcome, therefore, marks the beginning of a new phase in Bihar politics,   where the long-prevailing excessive emphasis on caste has been diluted - at   least partly. True, Nitish Kumar also played the caste card by focussing on the   extreme backward castes (EBCs) and the so-called Mahadalits. Aware that he might not be able to make any inroads into the RJD's main base   comprising Yadavs, who make up about 20 per cent of the population, Nitish Kumar   turned to the EBCs, who constitute about 32 per cent, and include castes such as   Kahars, Dhanuks, Kumhars, Lohars, Telis, Mallahs, Nais (to which former chief   minister Karpoori Thakur belonged) and so on. Then, to undercut the Lok Janshakti Party (LJP) leader Ramvilas Paswan's hold   on the Dalits, the Nitish Kumar government had set up the Mahadalit Commission   to identify the most deprived among the Scheduled Castes and focus on their   upliftment. As may be expected, the Paswan community was left out of the list of   beneficiaries of government schemes. Notwithstanding this partisan manipulation of castes, there is little doubt   that it is still the development projects and the improvement in law and order   which are primarily responsible for Nitish Kumar's success. What may have also helped him is his modesty. It is not impossible that he   consciously eschewed Lalu Prasad's flamboyance, realising that such bluff and   bluster can have a negative impact in the absence of achievement. He also   remained aloof from the controversial postures of the kind which the president   of his party, Sharad Yadav, took on issues such as the women's reservation bill   (threatening to commit suicide if it was passed) and on including castes in the   census enumerations. It is as the 'doer', who wants to restore Bihar's reputation of the 1960s as   one of the best-run states, that Nitish Kumar evidently wants to be remembered.   The voters have given a thumbs-up to his ambition.   
      
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