NDA retains power in Bihar with historic win, decimates Mahagathbandhan
Prashant Kishor’s JSP, whose candidates were in the fray in all but three of the seats, came a cropper.
PTI
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BJP won 87 seats, up from 74 in 2020; JD(U) tasted success in 78 deats, up from 43 (PTI )
Patna/New Delhi, 14 Nov
The ruling NDA decimated the Mahagathbandhan in Bihar on
Friday to retain power reaffirming Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s popularity
and Chief Minister Nitish Kumar’s enduring appeal and dealing a body blow to
the Congress and ally RJD.
The massive scale of the victory of the National Democratic
Alliance(NDA) can be gauged from the fact that its two main constituents--BJP
and JD(U)--are on course for an over 85 per cent strike rate in 101 seats each
they had contested. The alliance is set for a "200 paar" win for a
three-fourth majority with BJP emerging as the single largest party, according
to latest results and trends at 9.30 pm.
"The people of Bihar, with this massive victory and
their unshakable confidence, have taken the state by storm (garda uda
diya)," Prime Minister Modi told cheering party workers at BJP
headquarters in Delhi in the evening after accepting their greetings by waving
a 'gamcha'.
While the BJP won 87 seats, up from 74 in 2020, NitishKumar’s Janata Dal(U) tasted success in 78 constituencies, up from 43. The
majority mark in the 243-member Assembly is 122. The BJP and the JD(U) were
leading in two and seven seats respectively.
The Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD) seat tally slipped to 24 from
75 and Congress bagged only six out of the 61 seats it contested, down from 19.
RJD was leading in one.
Hailing the NDA's huge win, Prime Minister Modi said it has
given a new 'MY -- Mahila and Youth' formula with the people destroying the
"communal MY formula of the jungle raj people".
In an apparent reference to the Muslim-Yadav support base of
the RJD, Modi said that in Bihar some parties had formulated an "MY
formula" but today's victory has given a new "positive MY -- Mahila
and Youth" formula.
Overcoming anti-incumbency, Chief Minister Kumar thanked
people of the state for giving a "landslide" victory for the NDA.
"People of the state have expressed their confidence in
our government by giving us a landslide mandate in the polls. For this, I bow
to all the esteemed voters of the state, and express my heartfelt gratitude and
thanks," Kumar wrote in a post on X.
He also expressed gratitude to Prime Minister Modi for his
continuous support to the NDA government in the state.
A mix of state and central welfare schemes, including the
monetary aid to women as part of NDA's women-centric outreach, a constant
reminder of the "jungle raj" during the RJD rule by Modi and other
NDA campaigners and the viability of a “double-engine” government appears to
have largely contributed to their landslide victory.
Navigating the complex caste and community dynamics, NDA’s
wider caste alliance that dented the Mahagatbandhan’s core vote bank, multiple
welfare schemes targeted at Economically Backward Class(EBC) households, huge
support from women who overwhelmingly supported the liquor ban and from young
voters also helped the five-party alliance. One of the most striking features
of this election was the extraordinary turnout of women voters.
The NDA also appeared to have done well in Muslim-dominatedconstituencies, signalling a possible change in voting pattern in these
segments.
Prashant Kishor’s Jan Suraaj Party (JSP), dubbed the ‘X
factor’ in the Bihar polls and whose candidates were in the fray in all but
three of the seats, came a cropper.
The party, floated by the former political strategist,
failed to galvanise votes in its favour, despite a high-pitched campaign and
raising pressing issues such as unemployment, migration and dearth of
industries.
Celebrations erupted at the offices of BJP and JD(U) in
Patna situated across the street from each other, with workers playing drums,
bursting firecrackers and chanting slogans in praise of their respective
leaders.
In front of the residence of the chief minister, the JD(U)'s
75-year-old national president, party workers posed for photographs holding
aloft posters with the caption 'Tiger Abhi Zinda Hai'.
'Tiger Abhi Zinda Hai' --the title of a Bollywood blockbuster
--neatly captured the gist of Chief Minister Kumar's "neither tired nor in
a mood to retire" stance.
Shocking his rivals, Kumar, an electrical engineering
graduate, had a point to prove in the latest assembly elections, which were
held amid speculation of a fatigue factor, if not downright anti-incumbency,
made worse by rumours of his indifferent health. He is Bihar's longest serving
chief minister whilst also holding the post for his 9th term.
In the run up to the high stakes polls, Kumar, who has
earned the nick name of 'sushasan babu' (the man of good governance),
aggressively doled out benefits like hike in social security pensions and
stipends for Jeevika and Aasha and Aanganwadi workers, besides the much touted
'Mukhyamantri Mahila Rojgar Yojana', as part of which over one crore women have
got Rs 10,000 each in their bank accounts.
Kumar was not in the electoral fray this time too as he has
consistently taken the legislative council route to enter the state
legislature.
BJP's performance would further cement its position as the
numero uno political force in the country and also offset whatever setback that
might have been caused by last year's Lok Sabha polls when the party had to
rely on allies to remain in power in the Centre.
The NDA's tally in Bihar comes in the backdrop of the BJP's
back-to-back stunning performances in Delhi, Maharashtra and Haryana. Last
year, BJP had won 132 of the 149 seats it had contested in Maharashtra. The
strong backing to Chief Minister Kumar by Modi and his ministers during their
poll campaign also appeared to have paid rich dividends for the JD(U).
The LJP(RV), headed by Union minister Chirag Paswan, the
self-declared "Hanuman" of the Prime Minister, which was left with
only 28 candidates in the fray, with nomination papers of one of its nominees
getting rejected during scrutiny, won 18 seats and was leading in one
constituency.
Union minister Jitan Ram Manjhi's Hindustani Awam Morcha and
Rajya Sabha MP Upendra Kushwah's Rashtriya Lok Morcha, both junior partners in
the NDA, won five and four seats respectively. Both parties had contested six
seats each. To consolidate Dalit support, the BJP banked on its two key
allies--Manjhi and Paswan.
Mahagathbandhan’s
crushing defeat
The Mahagathbandhan, which includes the RJD, the Congress
and three Left parties, faced a crushing defeat, notwithstanding surveys and
opinion polls showing its Chief Ministerial candidate Tejashwi Yadav as the
most preferred leader for the top post.
Yadav, who according to Prime Minister Modi was declared as
a chief ministerial candidate after the RJD put a "katta" on the head
of its alliance partners, was trailing initially before he recovered ground in
Raghopur, the RJD stronghold. He defeated BJP candidate Satish Kumar by 14,532
votes
Mahagatbahndhan also struggled to retain its strongholds.
The Muslim and Yadav (M-Y) combination traditionally formed the bedrock of the
RJD's support base in Bihar.
It was an embarrassing loss of face for the Congress, often
seen as a "weak link" in the INDIA bloc.
Rahul Gandhi’s poll campaign against the BJP that revolved
around his "Vote Chori"(vote theft) allegations failed to garner any
support.
Hyderabad MP Asaduddin Owais's AIMIM, which has often been
accused of being a "B-team" of the BJP, won five seats. The party had
contested 32 seats.
The NDA's victory in Bihar polls, which were held in two
phases amid alleged irregularities in revision of electoral rolls by the
Election Commission, is also significant as many see it as a prelude to Assembly
polls in West Bengal and Assam, scheduled to be held in the next six months.
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