The RJD organisation has yet to regain momentum following the elections. In the post-poll period, the only leader to emerge visibly was the National President of the RJD Minority Cell, who articulated the party’s position on various issues.
He also conducted a public review of the party’s defeat in Kevathi with local workers. Beyond this, however, no other RJD leader — including the district president — came forward publicly.
This prolonged organisational silence did not sit well with grassroots workers. While party cadres initially maintained restraint and tolerated the leadership’s inactivity, growing dissatisfaction has now begun to surface as the situation deteriorates. Disillusioned workers are gradually distancing themselves from district president Uday Shankar Yadav.
The discontent culminated in the resignation of Vinith Kumar Verma, the party’s district general secretary and a young leader. Although Verma cited health reasons in his resignation letter, party sources claim that district-level workers had never fully accepted Uday Shankar Yadav as president.
According to party insiders, especially while the RJD remains in the opposition, the district unit requires a leader who is educated, organisationally skilled, and capable of presenting the party’s views firmly and rationally before officials. The failure to address this need, they argue, has now begun to produce visible consequences within the organisation.

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