wait for the decision of the governor to invite him to take oath and form the next government.
But he warned that if the governor failed to invite him soon, they will parade their legislators before the president in Delhi.
Manjhi was still defiant. “I am not running away. I am ready to prove my majority in the state assembly whenever Governor Tripathi invites me for it,” he told the media outside Raj Bhawan after meeting Tripathi.
Terming the ongoing move to replace him “a conspiracy against a Mahadalit”, he said he requested the governor to provide him the chance to prove his majority on February 19, 20 or 23. The assembly session will begin on February 20.
Hours earlier, the JD-U expelled Manjhi from the party, and blamed the Bharatiya Janata Party for orchestrating the episode.
“Manjhi has been expelled from the party (for six years). He has been indulging in anti-party activities,” JD-U leader K.C. Tyagi said in Delhi on Monday.
“All the things that happened were scripted. Operation Jitan Ram Manjhi has been orchestrated by (BJP president) Amit Shah,” he added. In Patna, JD-U leader Shrawan Kumar, who is considered close to Nitish Kumar, told IANS that the party has also informed Governor Tripathi about Manjhi’s expulsion. Nitish Kumar was re-elected the JD-U legislature party leader on Saturday.
JD-U spokesperson Neeraj Kumar said the numbers are with Nitish Kumar as he enjoys the support of the majority of the party legislators and its allies, the RJD and the Congress. According to JD-U sources, only 12 party legislators are with Manjhi.
Meanwhile, Manjhi’s loyalist JD-U legislator Rajeshwar Raj on Monday petitioned the Patna High Court against Sharad Yadav who, he contended, “illegally” and “unconstitutionally” summoned a legislature party meeting which elected Nitish Kumar as its new leader. Manjhi had already termed Yadav’s decision to call the meeting illegal.