Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar on Tuesday met several opposition leaders, including those from the Left and Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal, and claimed that he is neither a claimant for the prime minister's post nor desirous of it.
After meeting Communist Party of India-Marxist general secretary Sitaram Yechury, Kumar, who is on his first visit to the national capital after snapping ties with the Bharatiya Janata Party-led National Democratic Alliance last month, asserted that his focus is to bring together all opposition parties.
It is time for the Left parties, the Congress and all regional parties to come together to form a united opposition, Kumar told reporters, amid speculation that his party is eying the leadership role for him in a proposed united front against the BJP in the run-up to the 2024 Lok Sabha polls.
He is also expected to meet Samajwadi Party's Mulayam Singh Yadav and Indian National Lok Dal's Om Prakash Chautala.
The Janata Dal-United leader also met CPI general secretary D Raja.
"I have had a long association with the CPI-M from my younger days. You all have not seen me, but whenever I used to come to Delhi, I used to come to this office. Today we are all together again. Our entire focus is to unite all Left parties, the regional parties, Congress. This will be a big deal if all of us come together," he said.
Asked about his aspirations to become prime minister, Kumar said, "This is wrong. I am not a claimant for the post, nor am I desirous of it."
According to Yechury, Kumar's return to the Opposition fold and his desire to be part of a fight against the BJP is a great signal for Indian politics.
"First, the agenda is to unite all parties, not to decide on the PM candidate. When the time comes we will decide the PM candidate and let you all know," he said.
Delhi Deputy Chief Minister Manish Sisodia was also present in Kumar's meeting with AAP leader Kejriwal, whose equations with several other opposition parties like the Congress are far from smooth. JD-U leader Sanjay Jha accompanied Kumar in his meetings.
"Many thanks to Nitish ji for visiting my residence. Discussion was held on many serious issues related to the country like education, health, 'operation lotus', open horse-trading of MLAs to topple popularly elected governments, and increasing unrestrained corruption, unemployment and corruption for BJP dispensations," Kejriwal tweeted while attacking the saffron party.
The meeting between the two leaders lasted for nearly 90 minutes.
The Bihar chief minister had met Congress leader Rahul Gandhi at his residence on Monday.
Kumar has maintained that any opposition alliance against the BJP must include the Congress and the Left, a contention that is not fully shared by the AAP, Mamata Banerjee's Trinamool Congress and K Chandrashekar Rao's Telangana Rashtra Samithi.
JD-U spokesperson K C Tyagi asserted the Congress and the Left parties are an "essential component" of any non-BJP formation as he noted that his party has authorised Kumar to take required steps to bring together all opposition parties.
The state's longest serving chief minister also expressed his thanks to the Congress and Left leaders for their support to him after he snapped ties with the BJP.
Though he has constantly tried to play down the buzz about his prime ministerial bid, there has been a clamour within his party that Kumar is the most appropriate candidate to take on the mantle of the opposition leadership due to his vast experience and clean image.