A bitter family feud has exploded inside the Lalu Yadav parivaar after Rohini Acharya released a sharp new video amid her allegations against brother Tejashwi’s camp. The video shows Rohini confronting a journalist over remarks she says demeaned her kidney donation to her father. Meanwhile, Lalu’s estranged son Tej Pratap has fired fresh accusations, questioning whether “Jaichands” inside the RJD family are mentally torturing his parents. Tej Pratap has even appealed to PM Modi, Amit Shah and the Bihar government for an investigation, saying Lalu Prasad cannot handle the pressure. A humiliating poll defeat has cracked open old wounds, turning this feud into Bihar politics’ own Bigg Boss drama.
RJD chief Lalu Prasad Yadav’s family feud has burst into the open after daughter Rohini Acharya alleged she was beaten, humiliated and even threatened by her brother Tejashwi Yadav. In a series of emotional posts, Rohini claimed she was cursed, insulted and even regretted donating a kidney to her father. The clash reportedly erupted after RJD’s heavy Bihar poll defeat, with sources saying Tejashwi reacted angrily to Rohini’s criticism of his leadership. Mother Rabri Devi and sister Misa intervened during the fight, as Rohini left for Delhi in distress. Tej Pratap has now backed his sister strongly, while the BJP has jumped into the controversy. Is the Lalu clan facing its biggest internal crisis?
'I am quitting politics and I am disowning my family. This is what Sanjay Yadav and Rameez had asked me to do, and I am taking all the blame,' says Acharya
The RJD under Tejashwi has recorded one of its worst declines. The grand alliance's tally has crashed to 30 seats from 110 in 2020, while the RJD's individual count has dropped to 24 from 75.
An X post has sparked a wave of reflection on the turbulent past in the state, bringing into focus the personal struggles of many residents of Bihar
The most dramatic fall in 2025 is not Congress's, but the principal opposition RJD's.
The statement comes after Lalu Prasad Yadav's son was officially announced as Mahagathbandhan's CM face and Vikassheel Insaan Party (VIP) chief Mukesh Sahani was declared the deputy CM candidate at a press conference on Thursday.
In a major blow to the RJD ahead of the Bihar assembly elections, a Delhi court has framed serious criminal charges against Lalu Prasad Yadav, his wife Rabri Devi, and son Tejashwi Yadav in the long-running IRCTC hotel scam case. Special Judge Vishal Gogne ruled there was sufficient evidence to proceed to trial, accusing Lalu of corruption, criminal conspiracy, and cheating during his time as Railway Minister. Rabri and Tejashwi face charges of conspiracy and cheating. All three have pleaded not guilty, setting the stage for a fierce courtroom showdown. The CBI's probe reveals how Lalu allegedly misused his position to lease prime IRCTC hotels in Ranchi and Puri to a favored firm, in exchange for undervalued land deals funneled to family-linked companies. Adding to the drama, Lalu appeared in court in a wheelchair—despite being spotted briskly walking earlier that morning—sparking widespread speculation. The BJP has pounced on the development, slamming the Lalu family for "betraying Bihar's poor" and vowing electoral backlash. Meanwhile, Congress cries foul, labeling the charges a "pre-election BJP conspiracy" to hobble the opposition. With Lalu already under scrutiny in the separate Land-for-Jobs scandal—where railway jobs were allegedly traded for land—these fresh allegations could derail RJD's campaign momentum. As Bihar's polls heat up, this corruption saga underscores the high-stakes drama on the road to Patna. Will it sink the Yadavs, or fuel their fightback? Watch for full details, reactions, and what it means for the elections.
The court framed common charges of criminal conspiracy and cheating against Rabri Devi and Tejashwi Yadav, while Lalu Prasad faces additional charges under the Prevention of Corruption Act
Deshmukh said that the RJD-Congress combine cannot win Bihar by banking solely on the Muslim-Yadav combine or the 'MY' combination.
The political battle over the Anti-Criminal Neta Bill intensifies following a fiery showdown in Parliament. Union Home Minister Amit Shah staunchly defends the proposed law, which mandates the removal of Prime Ministers, Chief Ministers, and ministers detained for 30 days on serious criminal charges. Shah argues that governance cannot operate from jails, targeting opposition leaders like Arvind Kejriwal, who ran Delhi’s government from Tihar Jail for 160 days amid a liquor scam case. Highlighting his own resignation during past charges, Shah insists the bill, backed by PM Modi, applies universally, even to the PM’s office. He critiques Rahul Gandhi’s “doublespeak” on morality, citing Gandhi’s past rejection of an ordinance protecting convicted lawmakers like Lalu Yadav. Confident of parliamentary support, Shah believes opposition leaders may back it on moral grounds. However, opposition parties, led by Kejriwal, dismiss the bill as a political conspiracy, labeling Shah’s morality claims hypocritical.





