The 64-year-old leader, who resigned as Chief Minister on May 17 last year after JD(U) was almost wiped out in the Lok Sabha polls by Narendra Modi-led BJP, turned the tables with the masterstroke of aligning with Lalu Prasad and the Grand Alliance led by him won a thumping majority of 178 seats in a 243-member House in the Assembly elections.
Lalu Prasad had declared before the polls that Nitish Kumar will be the Chief Ministerial candidate for the alliance but there is already talk in political corridors that RJD could ask for Deputy CM's post.
RJD is the biggest partner in the grand secular alliance with 80 out of the cumulative 178 seats. JD(U) has 71 MLAs and Congress 27.
Lalu and Nitish, friend-turned-foe in state politics, sank their differences to revive an alliance that began over 40 years ago with a students' agitation which soon turned into a pan-India movement led by veteran socialist leader Jayaprakash Narayan.
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Though as different as chalk and cheese, Kumar backed Lalu in bagging the chair of the Leader of Opposition in the assembly in 1989 and again when he challenged Ram Sundar Das and Raghunath Jha, nominees of Prime Minister V P Singh and Chandra Shekhar respectively, for the chief minister's post after Janata Dal came to power in Bihar in 1990.
Suave and articulate, Kumar again became Railway Minister in 2001 and continued till 2004 during which period he was credited with introducing several reforms in the public sector behemoth like internet ticket booking and Tatkal system of instant booking.