Overview
- Kishor moved Wednesday night to the Bihar Navnirman Ashram on the outskirts of Patna and said he will use it as his home and political base until the next Bihar assembly polls.
- He left Sheikhpura House, a bungalow near Patna airport linked to party president Uday Singh’s family, and described the relocation as part of an organisational regrouping for his fledgling party.
- Kishor criticised state leaders, accusing Nitish Kumar of shifting to the Rajya Sabha while ensuring his son gained a cabinet foothold, and urged voters not to decide by caste, religion or cash inducements such as the Rs 10,000 transfers.
- He warned of possible economic pressures tied to the West Asia situation, predicting petrol and diesel prices could rise by up to Rs 10 per litre and that farmers may face worsening fertiliser shortages.
- Jan Suraaj failed to win any seats in the recent Bihar elections, and Kishor — a former I-PAC co-founder who launched the party in 2024 — is framing the move as both practical reorganisation and a political signal ahead of the next campaign.