PATNA, Oct. 19 -- Jan Suraaj Party (JSP) founder Prashant Kishor on Saturday launched a scathing attack on Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD) leader Tejashwi Prasad Yadav, dismissing his chief ministerial aspirations as a reflection of "arrogance or ignorance." Speaking at the Hindustan Samagam held here ahead of the Assembly elections, the JSP founder said, "It is the electorate who decide the CM... nobody in politics claims he or she would become the CM or the PM" His remarks-delivered from a stage earlier graced by NDA heavyweights like Amit Shah and Chirag Paswan-highlighted the fierce triangular contest among the NDA, the RJD-led Mahagathbandhan, and Jan Suraaj, while exposing internal fissures within the opposition alliance. A former political strategist- turned- politician, Kishor did not mince words in his criticism of Tejashwi's leadership and the Mahagathbandhan's disarray. He accused the RJD of clinging to outdated caste-based politics and failing to deliver development, warning voters against a return of the "jungle raj" era associated with Lalu Prasad Yadav's tenure. Taking a dig at Tejashwi's job creation promises, Kishor dared him to "calculate the expenses of doling out jobs to 1.50 crore people in a state with barely 20 lakh government employees," calling it an unrealistic pledge that exposed the RJD's lack of fiscal understanding. He further mocked the Mahagathbandhan's internal chaos, alleging that "tickets are being sold openly in the alliance," pointing to delays in seat-sharing and overlapping candidate announcements as proof of its fractured state. Positioning his party as a transformative alternative, Kishor claimed the JSP could win around 150 of Bihar's 243 seats if voters took a "leap of faith" in the new political dispensation. Emphasizing issues like education, employment, and governance, he urged the electorate to move beyond personality-driven politics. "This election isn't about Lalu, Tejashwi or Prashant Kishor-it's about your children and Bihar's future," he said, reiterating his party's manifesto promises, including scrapping the state's prohibition policy and acting tough against corruption. Kishor also clarified that he harboured no personal chief ministerial ambitions, saying he had chosen not to contest the elections to focus on campaigning for his party's candidates....