NEW DELHI (Reuters) - Nitish Kumar, the chief minister of India’s big northern state Bihar and once seen as a potential challenger to Prime Minister Narendra Modi, quit on Wednesday in a move that could shake up national politics.

FILE PHOTO: Bihar's chief minister and leader of Janata Dal United party Nitish Kumar gestures during an interview with Reuters in Patna, India January 8, 2012. REUTERS/Adnan Abidi/File photo

The abrupt resignation followed a falling out with Kumar’s coalition partner, Lalu Prasad Yadav, and torpedoed a state alliance that dealt Modi’s nationalist party a rare regional defeat in an election less than two years ago.

“The situation is such that it is impossible to work any more,” Kumar said into a scrum of TV cameras after tendering his resignation to the regional governor in the state capital, Patna.

The row centered around the role of Yadav’s son as a regional minister, but its political ramifications could be far broader.

Kumar’s grand alliance was seen by some leaders of India’s political opposition as a possible template to challenge Modi at the 2019 national vote.

It was not immediately clear whether Kumar’s resignation would trigger an election in the northern state or whether indeed he might team up with Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) which is the main opposition party in the state legislature.

In a volley of tweets, Modi praised Kumar for fighting corruption, saying that India’s 1.25 billion people “welcome and support his honesty.”

“It is the need of the country and the present times, to rise above political differences and fight as one against corruption, for a prosperous future of the country -- especially Bihar,” Modi said, before huddling with BJP leaders.

A senior minister in Modi’s government, reacting to the announcement, held out the possibility that the BJP would help keep Kumar in power in Bihar, home to more than 100 million people, but stopped short of saying this would happen.

“It was an unnatural alliance, it was not an alliance of ideological similarity or political understanding. It was an alliance of fear, fear of BJP,” Law Minister Ravi Shankar Prasad told reporters in New Delhi, referring to the fall of the Bihar state government.

Kumar served as a minister in the last BJP-led government more than a decade ago. “We still have good relations with him,” said Prasad.

On paper, the votes of Kumar’s regional JDU party and Modi’s BJP would secure a narrow majority in the Bihar state legislature. If the BJP joins the state government that would ultimately boost its strength in the upper house of the federal parliament, making it easier for Modi to push his reform agenda.