It was also said that during the course of the election campaign Lalu Yadav levelled a serious allegation against the Congress accusing the party of demolition of the Babri Masjid.
Iqbal Singh, the CWC member in-charge of Bihar, told media persons later that Lalu Yadav should be kept out of the government as there was no need for his inclusion. On Sunday morning both Lalu Prasad Yadav and Ram Vilas Paswan called up Sonia Gandhi and spoke to her on the telephone.
While Lalu Yadav wants to be back in the government and retain his Railway portfolio, Ram Vilas Paswan, who has himself lost the election, wants to remain with the UPA and would like to be the Chairman of the National Commission for Scheduled Castes -- a post
currently being held by Buta Singh.
But since Buta Singh contested as an Independent from Jalore in Rajasthan and lost, leading to the victory of the BJP candidate, the party may not act too kindly to Buta Singh at the moment. The party is upset that the division in the vote lead to the Congress defeat in Jalore.
With sentiment running high against both Lalu and Mulayam, the overwhelming feeling is that it would be suicidal to given them powerful positions in the government.
Sources said it is a decision which Sonia and Rahul Gandhi would take in the next few days. The UPA which is standing at 263, is running short of 9 MPs to make up the magical figure of 272 for government formation. The mood at the moment is to keep the bigger blocs out and instead focus on and bring in the smaller parties which cannot make
too many demands as they don't have the numbers.
This would include Ajit Singh's Rashtriya Lok Dal which has won 5 MPs, Deve Gowda's Janata Dal- Secular which has 3 MPs and there are 9 independents along with
other smaller parties.
The crucial decision of whether to bring in RJD with its 4 MPs still remains to be taken, though Congress leaders say their old friends are still in the UPA. The Congress said all secular parties, which is defined as all those who are not with the BJP and the Shiv Sena are free to give support to a Congress-led UPA government at the Centre.
But the party in return is not talking about including them in the government.
The Fourth Front leaders, Lalu, Mulayam and Paswan met on Sunday evening at the residence of the RJD chief to chalk out a common strategy to pressurise the Congress leadership, even as Mulayam Singh and Amar Singh have asked for time to meet Sonia Gandhi. Amar Singh has publicly offered that the Samajwadi Party would be only too happy to join the UPA government.