"In Bihar the party will contest separately. The bigger parties in the alliance did not consult us while declaring seats due to which the SP felt humiliated. This is not the 'gathbandhan dharma'," SP general secretary Ram Gopal Yadav told reporters in Lucknow.
The decision to walk out of the coalition was taken at a meeting of SP parliamentary board in the presence of party chief Mulayam Singh Yadav, who had brokered peace between Nitish Kumar and RJD supremo Lalu Prasad and succeeded in persuading the latter to accept the Bihar Chief Minister as the secular alliance's chief ministerial candidate.
However, president Sharad Yadav put up a brave face, claiming differences with Samajwadi Party will be sorted out and the alliance will remain intact.
Today's development may also put into jeopardy the proposed merger of six splintered parties of the erstwhile Janata Parivar into one political entity. These parties-- SP, RJD, JD(U), JD(S), INLD and Samajwadi Janata Party--had in April this year announced a merger, which they had said, would be formalised after the Bihar elections.
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Yadav said it was the duty of the major secular alliance constituents to consult SP before finalising seat-sharing arrangement.
As the fledgling coalition faced turbulence, JD(U) scrambled to salvage the situation. Party president Sharad Yadav spoke to Mulayam and hoped a "solution" will be found soon.
"We are old very old colleagues. I have to talk to Bhai (brother) Mulayam. I have talked to him once. I will talk to him again. We will resolve this finally," Yadav told reporters in Delhi, hours after Ram Gopal Yadav announced the SP's decision to opt out of the coalition and go it alone.
"This angle is not correct. Mulayam Singh Yadav is not someone new (to politics). There was a time when he had even got the sobriquet of Maulana Mulayam. Please don't infer any such meaning. Political leaders meet among themselves. Even I meet leaders of many parties. Does that I mean I am working in tandem with them.
"We will solve the probem that has arisen. You have to see the country is full of internal contradictions," Yadav said.
He was responding to a question whether he suspected SP of playing according to BJP's script by storming out of the alliance in Bihar. Mulayam Singh Yadav had met Prime Minister Narendra Modi some time back while party General Secretary Ram Gopal Yadav reportedly met BJP Chief Amit Shah on Monday before a meeting of NDA constituents.