Ram Madhav, BJP General Secretary and a former RSS spokesperson, told PTI that concerns of the veterans had been "well taken" by the party leadership which had detailed discussions with them.
"They had certain concerns about the Bihar outcome. Party has taken their views, observations seriously. Our leaders reached out to them. When you reach out to them, you will have larger discussion for longer duration. We had detailed discussions with them. Our leadership has explained its position to them.
After breathing fire at the BJP leadership, Advani had said last week in Gujarat that "consciousness" in the party had increased following its Bihar loss and also praised the Modi government, saying it is going in the right direction.
"So, broadly after our leadership's interactions (with them), things have settled down," Madhav said, adding that the party had learnt its lessons from the defeat but declined to elaborate.
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They had demanded that accountability be fixed for the loss.
Madhav also said BJP had learnt its lessons from Bihar
assembly election, in which it suffered a massive defeat at the hands of the grand alliance of JD(U)-RJD-Congress despite its high-pitched campaign helmed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi himself.
"We have done enough review and analysis of the outcome that was totally unexpected. Yes, it was disappointing. Several factors were there that have led to this kind of outcome. We have learnt our lessons but have decided not to discuss them in media," he said.
"We take both in our stride... We have learnt our lessons from Bihar election. Now we have left it behind and moved on to other challenges coming. Whatever needs to be learnt has been learnt," he said.
To a query whether BJP's decision to project Union Minister Sarbananda Sonowal as its main face in Assam assembly polls next year was necessitated by the debacle in Bihar where it was alleged to have ignore the local leadership, he said "each state and each election is different and not all elections are alike".
"We projected a chief ministerial candidate in Delhi, we lost. We did not project a chief ministerial candidate in Bihar, we still lost. So you cannot say because of Bihar you have projected... Bihar is different, Assam is different," he said.
In strong signals that Sonowal could be its chief minister if voted to power, BJP recently appointed him as its Assam unit chief and also head of the Election Management Committee.
However, Madhav, who handles the north eastern states in the party, declined to comment on whether Sonowal will be formally announced as its chief ministerial pick.
"In each state, there will be different milestones to be crossed. We are trying to form the next government in Assam. Even in other states we will try our best and give good performance," he said.