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        New Delhi, March 20:Amid persistent speculation about   early Lok Sabha elections, Railway Minister Lalu Prasad is ready to bury the   hatchet with two long-time friends who later turned bitter foes. Eager to consolidate its vote bank even as the Congress party   increasingly finds the going tough, the Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD) leader is   reaching out to Steel Minister Ramvilas Paswan and Samajwadi Party leader   Mulayam Singh Yadav. 
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  MPs from both RJD and Samajwadi Party admit that their top leaders are coming   together but no one is willing to speak on record. But there are plenty of signs   of the growing bonhomie among Lalu Prasad, Paswan and Mulayam Singh - three men   who were not even on talking terms until recently.
 Paswan, whose feud   with Lalu Prasad turned into war after the latter insisted on becoming the   railway minister in 2004, is ready to forget and forgive.
 
 And, it   appears, so is Mulayam Singh Yadav. Lalu Prasad, his base in Bihar facing a   major threat from Nitish Kumar and a rejuvenated Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP),   is more than willing.
 
 Referring to meetings among the three men, A   Samajwadi Party MP told IANS: "What's wrong with social courtesies? It is a good   thing."
 
 Lalu Prasad has decided not to field an RJD nominee for a Rajya   Sabha seat that fell vacant following the death of party MP Motiur Rahman.   Instead, he will support Paswan's Lok Janshakti Party (LJP) candidate Sabir Ali.   On his part, Paswan has fielded Ali and not Lalu Prasad's bete noire, Ranjan   Prasad, the earlier favoured candidate.
 
 Lalu Prasad has also been   regularly having tete-tete with Ram Gopal Yadav, Mulayam Singh's brother, in the   Central Hall of parliament. Gopal Yadav is the former Uttar Pradesh chief   minister's acknowledged Man Friday besides Amar Singh.
 
 The changing   equations come at a time when the Congress' electoral fortunes have taken a hit.   The Congress was routed in Gujarat and lost decisively to the BJP in Himachal   Pradesh too. Congress partners are naturally worried, what with persistent talk   of a snap parliamentary poll.
 
 Supporters of Mulayam Singh, Paswan and   Lalu Prasad say that a consolidation of their support base can cause havoc - to   their foes.
 
 A RJD MP who also did not speak on record said: "Nothing will   happen just now. The changing equations will have no impact in the immediate   future. But in the long run, whenever all of us have come together, we have   defeated everybody."
 
 Mulayam Singh, Paswan and Lalu Prasad consider   themselves as socialists. The latter two were comrades during the tumultuous   student politics of the 1970s in Bihar.
 
 At one time, all of them were   members of the Janata Party and the later Janata Dal - until the Janata   experiment collapsed under the weight of its own contradictions.
 
 Some   sources insist that the coming together of Lalu Prasad and Paswan is to be   credited mainly to Congress president Sonia Gandhi, who had carefully cultivated   a broad coalition that took on and defeated the BJP in 2004.
 
 That   alliance, later named the United Progressive Alliance (UPA), has begun to   crack.
 
 So is Gandhi playing a key role? An RJD MP answered: "We also hear   these things. We are not taken along for the meetings of the big leaders. How   would we know?"
  (IANS)  |    
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