Patna, Nov 14 (IANS) The Bihar Assembly elections delivered one of the most lopsided verdicts in the state’s recent history, with the National Democratic Alliance storming past the 200-seat mark in the 243-member House, securing a brute majority that dwarfs its 125-seat haul in 2020.
As counting progressed through the afternoon, the NDA’s tally hovered around 200-208 seats, powered by the Bharatiya Janata Party emerging as the single largest party with leads in 90-95 constituencies, closely followed by Nitish Kumar’s Janata Dal (United) at 79-84, Chirag Paswan’s Lok Janshakti Party (Ram Vilas) sweeping 20-22, and smaller allies like Hindustani Awam Morcha and Rashtriya Lok Morcha contributing another 8-10.
The opposition Mahagathbandhan crumbled to a historic low of under 40 seats, with the Rashtriya Janata Dal clinging to 26-36, Congress reduced to a humiliating 4-5, and Left parties barely scraping a handful. Voter turnout touched a record 67.13 per cent, nearly ten points higher than in 2020, yet this surge translated into an endorsement of continuity rather than change.
This landslide carries profound lessons for Bihar’s fractured polity and sends ripples across national politics.
The verdict is a masterclass in how disciplined alliances, welfare delivery, and caste engineering can amplify modest vote shares into supermajorities under India’s first-past-the-post system, while fragmentation and narrative failures can obliterate even entrenched opposition bases.
Nitish Kumar emerges as the undisputed colossus of Bihar politics, poised for a tenth term as Chief Minister and cementing his reputation as the state’s most durable leader since independence.
Despite whispers of fatigue after two decades in power and multiple alliance flips, Kumar’s personal goodwill, rooted in prohibition, law-and-order restoration, and women-centric schemes, proved unbreakable.
Elderly women voters in rural pockets repeatedly cited free rations, Jeevika groups, and bicycle-to-scooter pipelines as reasons for loyalty, propelling the JD(U) to strong gains in its EBC-Mahadalit strongholds.
The NDA’s bipolar consolidation reduced the effective number of parties to under 2.7, turning a 10-11 point vote lead into a 160-plus seat margin.
Women voters delivered the knockout punch, with turnout skewing sharply female and translating into sweeping NDA victories in regions like Mithila, Kosi, and Magadh.
Schemes promising ten thousand rupee grants, self-help linkages, and safety resonated far more than Tejashwi Yadav’s job pledges, underscoring how targeted welfare can neutralise anti-incumbency in a state where development deficits remain stark.
The Mahagathbandhan’s caste arithmetic, once its trump card, collapsed spectacularly as the NDA executed superior social engineering.
While the RJD retained its Yadav-Muslim core, the alliance failed to expand into non-Yadav OBCs and EBCs, where Nitish’s micro-caste outreach and Chirag Paswan’s Paswan consolidation ate deep.
Remarkably, the NDA made inroads into Muslim-dominated Seemanchal, fielding and winning with Muslim candidates in 10-12 seats, shattering the opposition’s monopoly claim.
AIMIM’s surprise 5-6 seat haul further splintered minority votes, proving fatal in a dozen close contests. Congress delivered its worst-ever Bihar performance, winning barely four seats from 61 contested and dragging the entire alliance down with a strike rate under 7 per cent.
Internal seat-sharing bickering, absent star campaigners, and failure to counter the BJP’s aggressive narratives turned the grand old party into a liability rather than an asset, raising existential questions for its role in future INDIA bloc configurations.
Vote splitters like Prashant Kishor’s Jan Suraaj, which polled a respectable 3.5 per cent but won zero seats, and AIMIM’s 1.4 per cent, acted as unwitting NDA allies by eroding Mahagathbandhan margins without building viable alternatives.
Kishor’s much-hyped grassroots padyatra yielded moral victories in urban pockets but exposed the limits of consultant-driven politics against entrenched caste-welfare machines.
The opposition’s campaign, heavy on unemployment promises and voter list conspiracy theories, failed to dent the NDA’s development narrative anchored in central schemes and Nitish’s sushasan brand.
Tejashwi Yadav’s energetic rallies energised youth but could not overcome the alliance’s defensive posture and credibility gaps on governance. For national politics, Bihar 2025 reinforces PM Modi’s enduring appeal in Hindi heartland states and validates the BJP’s strategy of propping regional satraps like Nitish while expanding its own footprint.
For the opposition, it is a brutal wake-up call: without ruthless alliance discipline, credible governance alternatives, and a unified narrative, the INDIA Bloc risks irrelevance ahead of future battles.
As celebrations erupt across NDA camps and stunned silence grips opposition offices, one truth stands clear: Bihar has decisively chosen stability over experimentation, welfare over promises, and Nitish Kumar’s tested hands over unproven alternatives.
–IANS
sktr/dan