Bihar Legislative Assembly election, 2015
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The Legislative Assembly election was held over five-phases in Bihar through October–November 2015 before the end of the tenure of the prior Legislative Assembly of Bihar on 29 November 2015.[2][3]
In April 2015, the Janata Parivar group (a group of six parties - Samajwadi Party, Janata Dal (United), Rashtriya Janata Dal, Janata Dal (Secular), Indian National Lok Dal and Samajwadi Janata Party (Rashtriya))[4][5] announced their intention to fight the election, with Nitish Kumar as their Chief Ministerial candidate. The Janta Parivar was joined by the Indian National Congress and the Nationalist Congress Party.[6] This coalition was restructured as Mahagatabandhan when the Samajwadi Party, Janata Dal (Secular), Indian National Lok Dal and Samajwadi Janata Party (Rashtriya) departed from the Janata Parivar.
The Bharatiya Janata Party led NDA fought the election alongside the Lok Janshakti Party, the Rashtriya Lok Samata Party and Hindustani Awam Morcha.[7][8][9]
Six left parties fought jointly, independently from both of the two main blocs.[10][11]
This election saw highest voter turnout in Bihar assembly polls since 2000, with a 56.8% voter turnout in this election.[12] The RJD emerged as a single largest party with 80 seats, followed by JD (U) with 71 seats and BJP with 53 seats. In terms of vote share, BJP came first with 24.4%, followed by RJD with 18.4% and JD (U) with 16.8% and Congress got 6.7%.[13]
Background
Electoral process changes
Election Commission of India announced that around 1,000 Voter-verified paper audit trail (VVPAT) machines will be used along with EVM in 36 out of the 243 assembly seats in Bihar elections, spread over 34 districts.[14][15][16][17][18][19] ECIL manufactured VVPATs will be used in 10 assembly constituencies, while BEL manufactured VVPAT will be used in 26 assembly constituencies.[20] The election information was webcast for the first time and voters can locate their polling booth on phones via an app.[21] About 1.5 crore voters would be informed about the voting dates via SMS.[22]
Election Commission used three new software products - Suvidha, Samadhan and Sugam - to facilitate campaigning, public grievance redressal and vehicle management in Bihar. Electoral Roll Management Software helped in addition/deletion/upgradation of rolls.[23] Android based app 'Matdan' helped the commission with poll-day monitoring in Bihar. Election Commission launched a special drive, Systematic Voters' Education And Electoral Participation (SVEEP) for voter awareness and higher voter turn out in Bihar elections.[24][25][26] Bihar would be the first state to have photo electoral rolls, with photographs of candidates on EVMs.[27][28]
Assembly constituencies of Bihar having VVPAT facility with EVMs[29] | |||
---|---|---|---|
Katihar | Purnia | Kishanganj | Saharsa |
Samastipur | Forbesganj | Munger | Jamui |
Madhubani | Begusarai | Khagaria | Gopalganj |
Supaul | Madhepura | Sasaram | Aurangabad |
Buxar | Jehanabad | Nawada | Sitamarhi |
Bhabhua | Motihari | Bettiah | Hajipur |
Gaya Town | Muzaffarpur | Darbhanga | Ara |
Biharsarif | Chhapra | Siwan | Kumhrar |
Bankipur | Digha | Bhagalpur | Banka |
Eleven NRI voters registered in the electoral rolls for the first time in Bihar electoral history. They were contacted by election officials through their family members.[30] It was the first time that NRIs cast their votes semi-electronically from foreign countries.[31][32] The e-postal ballot system and the existing proxy-voting facility is extended for NRI voters from their place of residence abroad.[33][34][35] But this facility is not available to migrant voters within India.[36][37][38]
A cross will be NOTA symbol to be used in this and subsequent elections.[39] The Election Commission introduced the specific symbol for NOTA, a ballot paper with a black cross across it, on 18 September. The symbol is designed by the National Institute of Design, Ahmedabad.[40][41]
On 31 July, the ECI published the final voters' list for the election,[42] which has an overall population of 10,38,04,637, in accordance with the 2011 Census of India.[43][44]
S.No | Group of voters | Voters population |
---|---|---|
1 | Male | 3,56,46,870 |
2 | Female | 3,11,77,619 |
3 | third gender | 2,169 |
- | Total voters | 6,68,26,658 |
Security
The security forces are going to use Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAV) drones, called Netras (eyes) for the election.[45][46] The Election Commission of India decided that Bihar Police personnel would not be deployed at any of the 62,779 polling stations.[47] They would be manned by members of the Central Armed Police Forces.[48]
Bihar Legislative Council election
In July 2015, BJP-led NDA won 13 seats (including 1 independent backed by BJP) out of 24 seats of Bihar Legislative Council election.[49][50] JDU and RJD combine won 10 seats only, while 1 seat was won by an independent candidate.[51][52]
Central government actions
On 19 August, the central government notified 21 Bihar districts, including the capital Patna, as backward areas and unveiled tax rebates for them.[53] On 25 August, the central government released the religious data of the 2011 census.[54][55] Hindus constituted 82.7% (8.6 crore people) in Bihar, while Muslims constituted 16.9% (1.7 crore peoples).[56]
In July 2015, Jitan Ram Manjhi was accorded "Z"-plus security cover by the Union Home Ministry, while Pappu Yadav was accorded "Y" category security by government of India.[57][58]
Other political developments
In May 2015, the JDU government increased the Dearness Allowance (DA) by six percent to 11 percent for provincial government employees and pensioners.[59] In July, Nitish Kumar announced a 50 percent quota for OBC, EBC and SC/STs in all government contracts up to Rs 15 lakh.[60][61] In July, the government issued a notification to give caste certificates to children from upper caste Hindu and Muslim families whose annual income was below ₹1.5 lakh (US$2,200).[62]
In September, the government agreed to the creation of a dedicated fund for fencing off temples and the inclusion of two of Extremely Backward Castes (EBCs), Nishad (Mallah) and Nonia, in the SC/ST category.[63][64] The state government also decided to provide grants-in-aid to 609 more madrassas across Bihar from the list of 2,459 registered by Bihar State Madrassa Education Board.[65] The Bihar government gave a tax-exempt status to Manjhi - The Mountain Man, a film based on Dashrath Manjhi, a Dalit who carved a path through a 360 ft long, 30 ft wide and 25 ft high hillock in 22 years (1960-1982).[66] Opposition parties accused Nitish Kumar government of doing nothing for Manjhi's village Gehlaur.[67]
In April, Nitish Kumar announced the JDU's decision to include few more castes, including the Teli, in list of Extremely Backward Class.[68]
Caste and religion data
The 2011 national census indicated that Scheduled Castes constituted 16% of Bihar's 10.4 crores population.[69][70] The census identified 21 of 23 Dalit sub-castes as Mahadalits.[71] The Mahadalit community consists of the following sub-castes: Bantar, Bauri, Bhogta, Bhuiya, Chaupal, Dabgar, Dom (Dhangad), Ghasi, Halalkhor, Hari (Mehtar, Bhangi), Kanjar, Kurariar, Lalbegi, Musahar, Nat, Pan (Swasi), Rajwar, Turi, Dhobi, Pasi, Chamar and Paswan (Dusadh).[72] The Paswan caste was initially left out of the Mahadalit category, to the consternation of Ram Vilas Paswan.[73][74]Adivasis (Scheduled Tribes) constituted around 1.3% of te Bihari population.[75][76][77] They include the Gond, Santhal and Tharu communities.[78][79] There are about 130 Extremely Backward Castes (EBCs) in Bihar.[63][80]
Castes of Bihar[81][82][83][84][85][86][87][88][89] | ||
---|---|---|
Caste | Population (%) | Notes |
OBC/EBC | 51% | Yadavs -14% Kurmis -4% kushwaha(koeri)-8% (EBCs - 26%[63][90][91][92][93] -includes,[94][95][96] Teli-3.2%)) |
Mahadalits*+ Dalits(SCs) | 16%[97][98] | includes Dusadh- 5%, Musahar- 2.8%[99] |
Muslims | 16.9 %[56] | includes Shershahbadi, Surjapuri, Ansari castes[100][101] |
Forward caste | 15% [102] | Bhumihar-6% Brahmin-5%[103] Rajput-3% Kayasth-1% |
Adivasis(STs) | 1.3% [104][105] | |
Others | 0.4% | includes Christians,Sikhs,Jains |
Schedule
On 9 September, Election Commission of India announced the dates for Bihar Assembly elections.[106]
Phase | Date | No of constituencies | Covering Districts | |
---|---|---|---|---|
I | 12 October | 49 | Banka, Bhagalpur, Begusarai, Jamui, Khagaria, Lakhisarai, Munger, Nawada, Samastipur, Shekhpura | |
II | 16 October | 32 | Arwal, Aurangabad, Gaya, Jahanabad, Kaimur, Rohtas | |
III | 28 October | 50 | Bhojpur, Buxar, Nalanda, Patna, Saran, Vaishali | |
IV | 1 November | 55 | Gopalganj, Paschim Champaran, purvi Champaran, Muzaffarpur, Sheohar, Sitamarhi, Siwan | |
V | 5 November | 57 | Araria, Darbhanga, Katihar, Kishanganj, Madhepura, Madhubani, Purnia, Saharsa, Supaul | |
Counting | 8 November | 243 | ||
Source: Election Commission of India |
Parties and alliances
Mahagathbandhan
On 7 June, Lalu Prasad Yadav announced the RJD was joining in an alliance with the JDU for the election.[107][108] On 13 July, he led a march demanding that the central government release its findings of the Socio Economic Caste Census 2011 (SECC) on caste,[109][110][111] although Union Minister Ram Vilas Paswan pitched for a comprehensive classification of caste data of SECC 2011 before its release,[112] and also said Lalu, Nitish will be worst impacted from the caste data even if its released.[113][114] BJP Leader Sushil Kumar Modi called for a rectification of errors in the cases of 1.46 crore people in India, including 1.75 lakh in Bihar, before releasing the caste data.[115]
On 3 August, incumbent Chief Minister Nitish Kumar declared that he would not stand in the election.[116][117] On 11 August, he announced the seat-sharing forumula, according to which JD(U) and RJD will contest an 100 seats each, while Congress will contest 40 seats in Bihar.[118] NCP pulled out of this alliance later.[119] On 23 September, Nitish Kumar announced the list of 242 candidates for the JDU-RJD-INC alliance.[120][121][122] OBCs were most favoured in the alliance ticket distribution plan.[123][124][125] 10% of tickets were allotted to women candidate by the alliance.[126] The Congress Vice-President Rahul Gandhi assigned the task to shortlist Congress candidates for each of the 40 assembly constituencies to former Governor of Kerala and Nagaland Nikhil Kumar.[127]
Nitish Kumar was the declared chief ministerial candidate for the Mahagathbandhan (Grand Alliance). Kumar started his Har Ghar Dastak (door-to-door) campaign on 2 July.[128][129][130] Initially there were definite political overtures when both Lalu Prasad Yadav and Nitish Kumar shared stage together in a public [131] event commemorating former chief minister Satyendra Narain Sinha's birth anniversary that witnessed veiled attacks on each other,the last time [132] they did it in public. Prashant Kishor was a key election strategist for the alliance.[133][134] The Janata Dal-United started 400 audio-visual vans called Jan Bhagidari Manch raths for the campaign.[135] Kumar is launching 'Bihar Samman Sammelan' in various cities, including Delhi and Mumbai, to connect with the Bihari diaspora.[136]
National Democratic Alliance
Bhartiya Janata Party (BJP) used 243 GPS-monitored raths (modified Boleros) and video vans in the election.[137][138][139] The BJP also set up a monitoring headquarters in Patna to track the movement of the GPS-equipped vehicles which will visit 40,000 villages in all 243 constituencies.[140][141] The campaign was kick-started by Prime Minister Narendra Modi in Muzaffarpur on 25 July, where he also inaugurated the permanent campus of IIT Patna in Bihta.[142][143][144][145] The BJP election exercise also involved three lakh volunteers.[137] Modi held his second election rally in Gaya on 9 August[146][147] and his third rally in Arrah[148][149] and Saharsa on 18 August.[150][151] Modi announced a Rs 1.25 lakh crore package for Bihar.[152][153] He addressed his fourth rally in Bhagalpur on 1 September.[154] Bollywood actor Ajay Devgan also campaigned for the BJP.[155][156] Modi addressed several rallies after 25 October in several constituencies.[157]
In a rally in Buxar on 26 October, Modi vowed to defend reservation of Dalits, STs, OBCs.[158][159][160] He said of the Mahagathbandhanthat it was trying to hatch a conspiracy to carve out a sub-quota on the basis of religion as the Supreme Court of India has said reservation cannot be more than 50%.[161][162][163][164] On 27 October, in Bettiah, he again accused Nitish Kumar and Lalu Prasad Yadav of diluting the share of SC, ST and OBC.[165][166] It promoted the view that an attempt was being made to take the reservation of Dalits and other OBCs and give it to other minorities.[167] Union Finance Minister Arun Jaitley also agreed with Modi's assertions that the idea of reservations on the basis of religion is fraught with danger.[168][169] On 1 November, Modi repeated the allegations that the two leaders came together in July 2005 to demand a review of the policy to provide for religion-based reservation.[170][171] A video dating from 2005 which was leaked showed Lalu was asking for a quota for Muslims.[172] On 3 July, BJP announced its seventh morcha, the BJP OBC Morcha, reportedly in regards to the election.[173][174][175]
On 11 June, Jitan Ram Manjhi announced his party Hindustani Awam Morcha alliance with the NDA for the election.[176][177]
On 14 September, the NDA announced its seat distribution: BJP got 160 seats, LJP got 40 seats, RLSP got 23 seats and HAM got 20 seats.[178] The NDA did not announce any chief ministerial candidate.[179] BJP announced the names of 154 candidates in three lists.[180][181][182] Caste played a major role in distributing tickets.[183][184] BJP also accommodated five candidates of the Hindustani Awam Morcha.[185] Later, the BJP gave the Imamganj seat to HAM for Majhi is contesting and BJP reduced its seat tally to 159.[186][187] On 1 October, the BJP released its manifesto.[188]
Socialist Secular Morcha
On 19 September, the leaders of six parties—SP, NCP, Janadhikar Party, Samras Samaj Party (SSP), (National People's Party) and Samajwadi Janata Party (SJP) -- announced the formation of a third front known as the Socialist Secular Morcha.[189] On 15 October, NCP leader Tariq Anwar announced that his party had decided to leave the third front.[190][191]
Left parties
On 24 July, the Communist Party of India (Marxist), the Communist Party of India, the Communist Party of India (Marxist-Leninist) Liberation, the All India Forward Bloc, the Socialist Unity Centre of India (Communist) and the Revolutionary Socialist Party decided to run in all constituencies on a join ticket citing its call for an alternative platform.[11] The CPI will contest 91 seats, while the CPI—ML, CPI(M), SUCI, Forward Bloc and RSP will contest 78, 38, 6, 5 and 3 seats, respectively.[192] CPI released its first list of 81 candidates on 16 September 2015.[193]
Others
Muslim parties
At least six Muslim parties contested the election.[194] AIMIM contested six seats.[195]
All India Majlis-e-Ittehadul Muslimeen (AIMIM) leader Asaduddin Owaisi addressed a rally in Kishanganj on 16 August.[196][197][198] Owaisi accused Nitish and Lalu of keeping the Seemanchal region (consisting of 24 seats) as a backward region.[199][200][201] AIMIM is contesting on 6 assembly seats in Seemanchal region where Muslim voters play a major role.[202][203][204] He addressed a public rally in Kishanganj on 4 October in the Sontha village, which is part of the Kochadhaman (Vidhan Sabha constituency).[205][206][207] He held further rallies at many places in Kishanganj and Purnia.[208][209]
On 5 October, AIMIM released its first list of its six candidates for the election.[210]
Bahujan Samaj Party
In June 2015, the Bahujan Samaj Party said it would contest all 243 seats.[211][212] In July, the BSP initially released its first list of 49 candidates, including five women candidates, by Bharat Bind, the president of the BSP Bihar unit.[213] National party leader Mayawati planned to campaign for its candidates.[214] BSP's first list has 11 Other Backward Class (OBCs) and 11 Muslims, while they also field Dalits and OBCs from non-reserved seats.[215] On 6 September, Mayawati said of the central government that it was being "remote-controlled" by the "communal and fascist" organisation Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS).[216][217][218]
Naseemuddin Siddiqui, Munquad Ali (Rajya Sabha MP) and Ram Achal Rajbhar were appointed to form a strategy to consolidate the Dalits, Most Backward Castes (MBCs) and Muslim votes.[219] On 9 September, Mayawati questioned the announcement of Dearness Allowance (DA) by the central government just before the election and again accused the RSS and its affiliated Sangh Parivar organisations of using the 2011 national census for fear mongering against Muslim population growth for sectarian purposes, as well as to divert attention from such issues as the alleged failure of the central government to deliver on its promises. She added that the census also showed positive signs such as the sex ratio among Muslims is 951 females to 1,000 males, which is higher than the national average and indicated a slowing of the Muslim population growth rate.[220] On 10 September, she called for the deployment of central forces in large numbers on electoral duty to assure a free and fair election and further asked the ECI to keep a watch on possible sectarian ploys by the BJP.[221][222]
Mayawati officially launched the party's campaign on 9 October from Banka.[223] On 13 October, addressing a rally in Rohtas and Kaimur districts, she claimed that the SP chief Mulayam Singh Yadav and the party leadership had surrendered to the BJP. She claimed that it has fielded candidates after consulting with the BJP.[224][225] She further called on the NDA to not allow the reservation policy for OBCs and SC/STs to fall under the RSS' influence.[226] On 25 October, Mayawati while addressing a rally in Buxar district of Bihar said that Samajwadi Party played in the hands of BJP due to which Nationalist Congress Party (NCP) broke away from it. She also alleged that BJP is working only for Business class and Nitish-Lalu governments did nothing for poor.[227]
Minor
Expelled RJD MP Pappu Yadav created the Jan Adhikar Party before the election and announced to fight against Laloo-Nitish alliance.[228][229] Yogendra Yadav has announced that Swaraj Abhiyan may extend its support to certain political parties, however it was not clear which one.[230]
On 17 September, Shiv Sena announced that it will contest over 150 seats during the election.[231][232] On 19 September, a third front- Socialist Secular Morcha - announced its seat distribution: SP got 85 seats, Janadhikar Party got 64 seats, NCP got 40 seats, SSP got 28 seats, SJP got 23 seats and NPP got three seats.[233] Former U.K. banker Akshay Verma's Sarvajan Kalyan Loktantrik Party contested about 90 seats in the election.[234]
The Aam Aadmi Party and JVM-P decided that they will not contest the election, but will campaign against the NDA.[235][236]
Opinion polls
When conducted | Ref | Polling organisation/Agency | Sample size | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
JD(U) + RJD + INC |
BJP + LJP + RLSP + HAM |
Other | ||||
Apr–May 2015 | [237] | ABP News [238] | NA | 127 |
111 |
5 |
Jun–Jul 2015 | [239] | ABP News – Nielsen | NA | 121 | 118 | 4 |
August - September 2015 | [240] | India Today - Cicero | 5,968 | 106 | 125 | 12 |
August - September 2015 | [241] | India TV-CVoter poll | 10,638 | 120-128 | 94-106 | 17-21 |
3–7 September 2015 | [242] | ABP News – Nielsen | 4,493 | 122 | 118 | 3 |
12–13 September 2015 | [243] | Zee News Survey | 31,906 | 70-103 | 140-173 | 0 |
23 September 2015 | [244] | Times Now – CVoter | 7,786 | 112 | 117 | 14 |
October 2015 | [245] | Leadtech - infoelections.com | 11,566 | 73 | 168 | |
8 October 2015 | [246] | CNN-IBN- Axis Poll | 27500 | 137 | 95 | 11 |
7 October 2015 | [247] | ABP News | NA | 112 | 128 | 3 |
October 2015 | [248] | India Today- Cicero poll | NA | 122 | 111 | 10 |
October 2015 | [249] | News Nation | 7,000 | 115-119 | 120-124 | 2-4 |
October 2015 | [250] | India TV- Cvoter | 9,916 | 108-124 | 111-127 | 4-12 |
Election
The electoral process cost about ₹300 crore (US$45 million) to the Bihari government exchequer.[251][252][253]
The electorate in Chandila village of Maker block in Saran district's Amnour (Vidhan Sabha constituency) boycotted the election and no votes were cast in protest against the government's failure to bring electricity to their village.[254][255]
Exit polls
The Axis APM polls was not finally aired by its commissioning news channel, CNN-IBN.[256]
Polling organisation/Agency | Ref | Sample size | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
JD(U) + RJD + INC |
BJP + LJP + RLSP + HAM |
Other | |||
ABP News – Nielsen | [257] | N/A | 130 | 108 | 5 |
CNN-IBN – Axis | [256][258][259][260][261] | N/A | 176 | 64 | 3 |
India Today - Cicero | [262] | N/A | 111-123 | 113-127 | 4-8 |
NDTV - Hansa | [263] | 76,000 | 110 | 125 | 8 |
India TV- Times Now-CVoter | [264] | 35,000+ | 112-132 | 101-121 | 6-14 |
News 24 - Today's Chanakya | [265] | N/A | 83 | 155 | 5 |
Result
The result was announced on 8 November.[266] The counting of EVMs of 14 assembly constituencies of Patna district was done in AN College Patna.[267][268] The NOTA option had nine lakhs, or 2.5%, of popular votes and was the highest it had achieved in Bihar elections.[269][270] The number of Yadav MLAs increased to 61 in the Bihar assembly.[271]
According to one analysis, RJD was the biggest beneficiary of this election. RJD increased its seats tally by 58 compared with previous election. RJD had the best strike rate by winning 80 of the 101 seats contested. RJD became the single largest party in Bihar Assembly. RJD defeated BJP in 36 seats BJP had won in the last election, similarly it took 24 seats JD (U) had won in the last election.[272]
178 | 58 | 7 |
Mahaghatbandhan | NDA | Others |
Alliance | Political party | Seats Contested | Won | Net change in seats | % of Seats |
Votes | Vote % | Change in vote % | Vote % in Seats Contested | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mahagatbandhan | Janata Dal (United) | 101 | 71 | 44 | 29.21 | 6,416,414 | 16.8 | 5.81 | 40.65 | |
Rashtriya Janata Dal | 101 | 80 | 68 | 32.92 | 6,995,509 | 18.4 | 0.44 | 44.35 | ||
Indian National Congress | 41 | 27 | 23 | 11.11 | 2,539,638 | 6.7 | 1.68 | 39.49 | ||
NDA | Bharatiya Janata Party | 159 | 53 | 38 | 21.81 | 9,308,015 | 24.4 | 7.94 | 37.48 | |
Lok Janshakti Party | 40 | 2 | 1 | 0.82 | 1,840,834 | 4.8 | 1.95 | 28.79 | ||
Rashtriya Lok Samata Party | 23 | 2 | 2 | 0.82 | 976,787 | 2.6 | N/A | N/A | ||
Hindustani Awam Morcha | 21 | 1 | 1 | 0.41 | 864,856 | 2.3 | N/A | N/A | ||
Left parties | Communist Party of India | 91 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 516,699 | 1.4 | 0.29 | 3.43 | |
CPI(ML) Liberation | 78 | 3 | 3 | 1.23 | 587,701 | 1.5 | 0.29 | 3.82 | ||
Communist Party of India (Marxist) | 38 | 0 | 0 | 232,149 | 0.6 | 0.21 | 3.32 | |||
Socialist Unity Centre of India (Communist) | 10 | 0 | 0 | 11,621 | 0.03 | 0.02 | 0.74 | |||
All India Forward Bloc | 8 | 0 | 0 | 6,936 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.21 | |||
Revolutionary Socialist Party | 3 | 0 | 0 | 3,045 | 0.01 | 0.00 | 0.64 | |||
Socialist Secular Morcha |
Samajwadi Party | 85 | 0 | 0 | 385,511 | 1.0 | 0.45 | 1.83 | ||
Janadhikar Party | 64 | 0 | 0 | 514,748 | 1.4 | N/A | N/A | |||
Nationalist Congress Party | 40 | 0 | 0 | 185,437 | 0.5 | 1.32 | 2.82 | |||
Samras Samaj Party | 28 | 0 | 0 | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | |||
Samajwadi Janata Party | 23 | 0 | 0 | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | |||
National People's Party | 3 | 0 | 0 | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | |||
Others | Bahujan Samaj Party | 243 | 0 | 0 | 788,024 | 2.1 | 1.11 | 2.21 | ||
Shiv Sena | 150 | 0 | 0 | 211,131 | 0.6 | 0.21 | 1.84 | |||
Sarvajan Kalyan Loktantrik Party | 90 | 0 | 0 | 108,851 | 0.3 | N/A | 0.91 | |||
Jharkhand Mukti Morcha | N/A | 0 | 0 | 103,940 | 0.3 | 0.31 | 2.02 | |||
Garib Janata Dal (Secular) | N/A | 0 | 0 | 92,279 | 0.2 | N/A | 0.66 | |||
All India Majlis-e-Ittehadul Muslimeen | 6 | 0 | 0 | 80,248 | 0.2 | N/A | 8.04 | |||
Independents | N/A | 4 | 2 | 1.64 | 3,580,953 | 9.4 | 3.82 | 9.57 | ||
NOTA | 243 | N/A | N/A | N/A | 947,276 | 2.5 | N/A | 2.49 | ||
Total | 243 | Voters | 37,696,978 | Turnout | 56.90% |
List of elected candidates
Constituency No. |
Vidhan Sabha Constituency |
District | Winner | Party | Runner Up | Runner Up Party | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Valmiki Nagar | Paschim Champaran | Dhirendra Pratap Singh | Independent[275] | Irshad Hussain | INC | ||
2 | Ramnagar | Paschim Champaran | Bhagirathi Devi | BJP | Purnmasi Ram | INC | ||
3 | Narkatiaganj | Paschim Champaran | Vinay Varma | INC | Renu Devi | BJP | ||
4 | Bagaha | Paschim Champaran | Raghaw Sharan Pandey | BJP | Bhishm Sahani | JD(U) | ||
5 | Lauriya | Paschim Champaran | Vinay Bihari | BJP | Rana Kaushal Pratap Singh | RJD | ||
6 | Nautan | Paschim Champaran | Narayan Prasad | BJP | Baidyanath Prasad Mahto | JD(U) | ||
7 | Chanpatiya | Paschim Champaran | Prakash Rai | BJP | N. N. Sahi | JD(U) | ||
8 | Bettiah | Paschim Champaran | Madan Mohan Tiwari | INC | Renu Devi | BJP | ||
9 | Sikta | Paschim Champaran | Khurshid Urf Firoj Ahmad | JD(U) | Dilip Verma | BJP | ||
10 | Raxaul | Purvi Champaran | Ajay Kumar Singh | BJP | Suresh Kumar | RJD | ||
11 | Sugauli | Purvi Champaran | Ramchandra Sahni | BJP | Om Prakash Choudhary | RJD | ||
12 | Narkatiya | Purvi Champaran | Shamim Ahmad | RJD | Renu Devi | BJP | ||
13 | Harsidhi | Purvi Champaran | Rajendra Kumar | RJD | Krishnandan Paswan | BJP | ||
14 | Govindganj | Purvi Champaran | Raju Tiwari | LJP | Brajesh Kumar | INC | ||
15 | Kesaria | Purvi Champaran | Rajesh Kumar | RJD | Rajendra Prasad Gupta | BJP | ||
16 | Kalyanpur | Purvi Champaran | Sachindra Prasad Singh | BJP | Razia Khatoon | JD(U) | ||
17 | Pipra | Purvi Champaran | Shyambabu Prasad Yadav | BJP | Krishan Chandra | JD(U) | ||
18 | Madhuban | Purvi Champaran | Rana Randhir | BJP | Shivajee Rai | JD(U) | ||
19 | Motihari | Purvi Champaran | Pramod Kumar | BJP | Binod Kumar Shrivastava | RJD | ||
20 | Chiraia | Purvi Champaran | Lal Babu Prasad Gupta | BJP | Laxmi Narayan Prasad Yadav | RJD | ||
21 | Dhaka | Purvi Champaran | Faisal Rahman | RJD | Pawan Kumar Jaiswal | BJP | ||
22 | Sheohar | Sheohar | Sharfuddin | JD(U) | Labhali Anand | HAM | ||
23 | Riga | Sitamarhi | Amit Kumar | INC | Moti Lal Prasad | BJP | ||
24 | Bathnaha | Sitamarhi | Dinkar Ram | BJP | Surendra Ram | INC | ||
25 | Parihar | Sitamarhi | Gaytri Devi | BJP | Ram Chandra Purve | RJD | ||
26 | Sursand | Sitamarhi | Syed Abu Dozana | RJD | Amit Kumar | Independent | ||
27 | Bajpatti | Sitamarhi | Ranju Geeta | JD(U) | Rekha Kumari | RLSP | ||
28 | Sitamarhi | Sitamarhi | Sunil Kumar | RJD | Sunil Kumar alias Pintu | BJP | ||
29 | Runnisaidpur | Sitamarhi | Mangita Devi | RJD | Pankaj Kumar Mishra | RLSP | ||
30 | Belsand | Sitamarhi | Sunita Singh Chauhan | JD(U) | Mohd Nasir Ahamad | LJP | ||
31 | Harlakhi | Madhubani | Sudhanshu Shekhar replaced Basant Kumar(expired) on 16.02.2016 | RLSP | Mohammad Shabbir | INC | ||
32 | Benipatti | Madhubani | Bhawana Jha | INC | Vinod Narain Jha | BJP | ||
33 | Khajauli | Madhubani | Sitaram Yadav | RJD | Arun Shankar Prasad | BJP | ||
34 | Babubarhi | Madhubani | Kapil Deo Kamat | JD(U) | Binod Kumar Singh | LJP | ||
35 | Bisfi | Madhubani | Faiyaz Ahmad | RJD | Manoj Kumar Yadav | RLSP | ||
36 | Madhubani | Madhubani | Samir Kumar Mahaseth | RJD | Ramdeo Mahto | BJP | ||
37 | Rajnagar | Madhubani | Ram Prit Paswan | BJP | Ramawatar Paswan | RJD | ||
38 | Jhanjharpur | Madhubani | Gulab Yadav | RJD | Nitish Mishra | BJP | ||
39 | Phulparas | Madhubani | Guljar Devi | JD(U) | Ram Sundar Yadav | BJP | ||
40 | Laukaha | Madhubani | Lakshmeshwar Roy | JD(U) | Pramod Kumar Priyedarshi | BJP | ||
41 | Nirmali | Supaul | Anirudh Prasad Yadav | JD(U) | Ram Kumar Roy | BJP | ||
42 | Pipra | Supaul | Yadubansh Kumar Yadav | RJD | Vishwamohan Kumar | BJP | ||
43 | Supaul | Supaul | Bijendra Prasad Yadav | JD(U) | Kishor Kumar | BJP | ||
44 | Triveniganj | Supaul | Veena Bharti | JD(U) | Anant Kumar Bharti | LJP | ||
45 | Chhatapur | Supaul | Neeraj Kumar Singh | BJP | Jahur Alam | RJD | ||
46 | Narpatganj | Araria | Anil Kumar Yadav | RJD | Janardan Yadav | BJP | ||
47 | Raniganj | Araria | Achmit Rishidev | JD(U) | Ramji Das Rishidev | BJP | ||
48 | Forbesganj | Araria | Vidya Sagar Keshri | BJP | Krityanand Biswas | RJD | ||
49 | Araria | Araria | Avidur Rahman | INC | Ajay Kumar Jha | LJP | ||
50 | Jokihat | Araria | Sarfaraj Alam | JD(U) | Ranjeet Yadav | Independent | ||
51 | Sikti | Araria | Vijay Kumar Mandal | BJP | Shatrughan Prasad Suman | JD(U) | ||
52 | Bahadurganj | Kishanganj | M.D. Tauseef Alam | INC | Awadh Bihari Singh | BJP | ||
53 | Thakurganj | Kishanganj | Naushad Alam | JD(U) | Gopal Kumar Agarwal | LJP | ||
54 | Kishanganj | Kishanganj | Dr Mohammad Jawaid | INC | Sweety Singh | BJP | ||
55 | Kochadhaman | Kishanganj | Mujahid Alam | JD(U) | Akhtarul Iman | AIMIM | ||
56 | Amour | Purnia | Abdul Jalil Mastan | INC | Saba Zafar | BJP | ||
57 | Baisi | Purnia | Abdus Subhan | RJD | Binod Kumar | Independent | ||
58 | Kasba | Purnia | Mohd. Afaque Alam | INC | Pradip Kumar Das | BJP | ||
59 | Banmankhi | Purnia | Krishna Kumar Rishi | BJP | Sanjiv Kumar Paswan | RJD | ||
60 | Rupauli | Purnia | Bima Bharti | JD(U) | Prem Prakash Mandal | BJP | ||
61 | Dhamdaha | Purnia | Leshi Singh | JD(U) | Shiv Shankar Thakur | RLSP | ||
62 | Purnia | Purnia | Vijay Kumar Khemka | BJP | Indu Sinha | INC | ||
63 | Katihar | Katihar | Tarkishore Prasad | BJP | Bijay Singh | JD(U) | ||
64 | Kadwa | Katihar | Shakeel Ahmed Khan | INC | Chander Bhushan Thakur | BJP | ||
65 | Balrampur | Katihar | Mahbub Alam | CPI(ML) Liberation | Barun Kumar Jha | BJP | ||
66 | Pranpur | Katihar | Binod Kumar Singh | BJP | Israt Parween | NCP | ||
67 | Manihari | Katihar | Manohar Prasad Singh | INC | Anil Kumar Oraon | LJP | ||
68 | Barari | Katihar | Neeraj Kumar | RJD | Bibhash Chandra Choudhary | BJP | ||
69 | Korha | Katihar | Punam Kumari | INC | Mahesh Paswan | BJP | ||
70 | Alamnagar | Madhepura | Narendra Narayan Yadav | JD(U) | Chandan Singh | LJP | ||
71 | Bihariganj | Madhepura | Niranjan Kumar Mehta | JD(U) | Ravindra Charan Yadav | BJP | ||
72 | Singheshwar | Madhepura | Ramesh Rishidev | JD(U) | Manju Devi | HAM | ||
73 | Madhepura | Madhepura | Chandra Shekhar | RJD | Vijay Kumar Bimal | BJP | ||
74 | Sonbarsha | Saharsa | Ratnesh Sada | JD(U) | Sarita Devi | LJP | ||
75 | Saharsa | Saharsa | Arun Kumar | RJD | Alok Ranjan | BJP | ||
76 | Simri Bakhtiarpur | Saharsa | Dinesh Chandra Yadav | JD(U) | Yusuf Salahuddin | LJP | ||
77 | Mahishi | Saharsa | Dr. Abdul Ghafoor | RJD | Chandan Kumar Sah | RLSP | ||
78 | Kusheshwar Asthan | Darbhanga | Shashi Bhushan Hazari | JD(U) | Dhananjay Kumar | LJP | ||
79 | Gaura Bauram | Darbhanga | Madan Sahni | JD(U) | Vinod Sahni | LJP | ||
80 | Benipur | Darbhanga | Sunil Choudhary | JD(U) | Gopal Jee Thakur | BJP | ||
81 | Alinagar | Darbhanga | Abdul Bari Siddiqui | RJD | Mishri Lal Yadav | BJP | ||
82 | Darbhanga Rural | Darbhanga | Lalit Kumar Yadav | RJD | Naushad Ahmad | HAM | ||
83 | Darbhanga | Darbhanga | Sanjay Saraogi | BJP | Om Prakash Kheria | RJD | ||
84 | Hayaghat | Darbhanga | Amarnath Gami | JD(U) | Ramesh Choudhary | LJP | ||
85 | Bahadurpur | Darbhanga | Bhola Yadav | RJD | Hari Sahani | BJP | ||
86 | Keoti | Darbhanga | Faraz Fatmi | RJD | Ashok Kumar Yadav | BJP | ||
87 | Jale | Darbhanga | Jibesh Kumar | BJP | Rishi Mishra | JD(U) | ||
88 | Gaighat | Muzaffarpur | Maheshwar Prasad Yadav | RJD | Veena Devi | BJP | ||
89 | Aurai | Muzaffarpur | Surendra Kumar | RJD | Ram Surat Ray | BJP | ||
90 | Minapur | Muzaffarpur | Rajeev Kumar | RJD | Ajay Kumar | BJP | ||
91 | Bochahan | Muzaffarpur | Bebi Kumari | Independent | Ramai Ram | JD(U) | ||
92 | Sakra | Muzaffarpur | Lal Babu Ram | RJD | Arjun Ram | BJP | ||
93 | Kurhani | Muzaffarpur | Kedar Prasad Gupta | BJP | Manoj Kumar Singh | JD(U) | ||
94 | Muzaffarpur | Muzaffarpur | Suresh Kumar Sharma | BJP | Bijendra Chaudhary | JD(U) | ||
95 | Kanti | Muzaffarpur | Ashok Kumar Choudhary | Independent | Ajeet Kumar | HAM | ||
96 | Baruraj | Muzaffarpur | Nand Kumar Rai | RJD | Arjun Kumar Singh | BJP | ||
97 | Paroo | Muzaffarpur | Ashok Kumar Singh | BJP | Shankar Prasad | RJD | ||
98 | Sahebganj | Muzaffarpur | Ramvichar Rai | RJD | Raju Kumar Singh | BJP | ||
99 | Baikunthpur | Gopalganj | Mithilesh Tiwari | BJP | Manjeet Kumar Singh | JD(U) | ||
100 | Barauli | Gopalganj | Md. Nematullah | RJD | Rampravesh Rai | BJP | ||
101 | Gopalganj | Gopalganj | Subhash Singh | BJP | Reyazul Haq | RJD | ||
102 | Kuchaikote | Gopalganj | Amrendra Kumar Pandey | JD(U) | Kali Prasad Pandey | BJP | ||
103 | Bhore | Gopalganj | Anil Kumar | INC | Indradev Manjhi | BJP | ||
104 | Hathua | Gopalganj | Ramsewak Singh | JD(U) | Mahachandra Prasad Singh | HAM | ||
105 | Siwan | Siwan | Vyas Deo Prasad | BJP | Bablu Prasad | JD(U) | ||
106 | Ziradei | Siwan | Ramesh Singh Kushwaha | JD(U) | Asha Devi | BJP | ||
107 | Darauli | Siwan | Satyadeo Ram | CPI(ML) Liberation | Ramayan Manjhi | BJP | ||
108 | Raghunathpur | Siwan | Harishankar Yadav | RJD | Manoj Kumar Singh | BJP | ||
109 | Daraunda | Siwan | Kavita Singh | JD(U) | Jitendra Swami | BJP | ||
110 | Barharia | Siwan | Shyam Bahadur Singh | JD(U) | Bachha Panday | LJP | ||
111 | Goriakothi | Siwan | Satyadeo Prasad Singh | RJD | Devesh Kant Singh | BJP | ||
112 | Maharajganj | Siwan | Hem Narayan Sah | JD(U) | Kumar Deo Ranjan Singh | BJP | ||
113 | Ekma | Saran | Manoranjan Singh | JD(U) | Kameshwar Kumar Singh | BJP | ||
114 | Manjhi | Saran | Vijay Shanker Dubey | INC | Keshav Singh | LJP | ||
115 | Baniapur | Saran | Kedar Nath Singh | RJD | Tarkeshwar Singh | BJP | ||
116 | Taraiya | Saran | Mudrika Prasad Roy | RJD | Janak Singh | BJP | ||
117 | Marhaura | Saran | Jeetendra Kumar Rai | RJD | Lal Babu Ray | BJP | ||
118 | Chapra | Saran | Dr. C. N. Gupta | BJP | Randhir Kumar Singh | RJD | ||
119 | Garkha | Saran | Muneshwar Chaudhary | RJD | Gyanchand Manjhi | BJP | ||
120 | Amnour | Saran | Shatrudhan Tiwari | BJP | Krishan Kumar Mantoo | JD(U) | ||
121 | Parsa | Saran | Chandrika Rai | RJD | Chhotelal Rai | LJP | ||
122 | Sonepur | Saran | Dr. Ramanuj Prasad | RJD | Vinay Kumar Singh | BJP | ||
123 | Hajipur | Vaishali | Awadhesh Singh | BJP | Jagannath Prasad Rai | INC | ||
124 | Lalganj | Vaishali | Raj Kumar Sah | LJP | Vijay Kumar Shukla | JD(U) | ||
125 | Vaishali | Vaishali | Raj Kishore Singh | JD(U) | Brishin Patel | HAM | ||
126 | Mahua | Vaishali | Tej Pratap Yadav | RJD | Ravindra Ray | HAM | ||
127 | Raja Pakar | Vaishali | Shiv Chandra Ram | RJD | Ram Nath Raman | LJP | ||
128 | Raghopur | Vaishali | Tejashwi Prasad Yadav | RJD | Satish Kumar | BJP | ||
129 | Mahnar | Vaishali | Umesh Singh Kushwaha | JD(U) | Dr. Achuta Nand | BJP | ||
130 | Patepur | Vaishali | Prema Chaudhary | RJD | Mahendra Baitha | BJP | ||
131 | Kalyanpur | Samastipur | Maheshwar Hazari | JD(U) | Prince Raj | LJP | ||
132 | Warisnagar | Samastipur | Ashok Kumar | JD(U) | Chandrashekhar Rai | LJP | ||
133 | Samastipur | Samastipur | Akhtarul Islam Shaheen | RJD | Renu Kumari | BJP | ||
134 | Ujiarpur | Samastipur | Alok Kumar Mehta | RJD | Kumar Anant | RLSP | ||
135 | Morwa | Samastipur | Vidya Sagar Singh Nishad | JD(U) | Suresh Ray | BJP | ||
136 | Sarairanjan | Samastipur | Vijay Kumar Choudhary | JD(U) | Ranjeet Nirguni | BJP | ||
137 | Mohiuddinnagar | Samastipur | Ejya Yadav | RJD | Rajesh Kumar Singh | Independent | ||
138 | Bibhutipur | Samastipur | Ram Balak Singh | JD(U) | Ram Deo Verma | CPI(M) | ||
139 | Rosera | Samastipur | Dr. Ashok Kumar | INC | Manju Hazari | BJP | ||
140 | Hasanpur | Samastipur | Raj Kumar Ray | JD(U) | Vinod Choudhary | RLSP | ||
141 | Cheria-Bariarpur | Begusarai | Kumari Manju Verma | JD(U) | Anil Kumar Chaudhary | LJP | ||
142 | Bachhwara | Begusarai | Ramdeo Rai | INC | Arvind Kumar Singh | LJP | ||
143 | Teghra | Begusarai | Birendra Kumar | RJD | Ram Lakhan Singh | BJP | ||
144 | Matihani | Begusarai | Narendra Kumar Singh | JD(U) | Sarvesh Kumar | BJP | ||
145 | Sahebpur Kamal | Begusarai | Shreenarayan Yadav | RJD | M.D. Aslam | LJP | ||
146 | Begusarai | Begusarai | Amita Bhushan | INC | Surendra Mehta | BJP | ||
147 | Bakhri | Begusarai | Upendra Paswan | RJD | Ramanand Ram | BJP | ||
148 | Alauli | Khagaria | Chandan Kumar | RJD | Pashupati Kumar Paras | LJP | ||
149 | Khagaria | Khagaria | Poonam Devi Yadav | JD(U) | Rajesh Kumar | HAM | ||
150 | Beldaur | Khagaria | Panna Lal Singh Patel | JD(U) | Mithilesh Kumar Nishad | LJP | ||
151 | Parbatta | Khagaria | Ramanand Prasad Singh | JD(U) | Ramanuj Choudhary | BJP | ||
152 | Bihpur | Bhagalpur | Varsha Rani | RJD | Kumar Shailendra | BJP | ||
153 | Gopalpur | Bhagalpur | Narendra Kumar Niraj | JD(U) | Anil Kumar Yadav | BJP | ||
154 | Pirpainti | Bhagalpur | Ram Vilash Paswan | RJD | Lalan Kumar | BJP | ||
155 | Kahalgaon | Bhagalpur | Sadanand Singh | INC | Niraj Kumar Mandal | LJP | ||
156 | Bhagalpur | Bhagalpur | Ajeet Sharma | INC | Arjit Shashwat Choubey | BJP | ||
157 | Sultanganj | Bhagalpur | Subodh Roy | JD(U) | Himanshu Prasad | RLSP | ||
158 | Nathnagar | Bhagalpur | Ajay Kumar Mandal | JD(U) | Amar Nath Prasad | LJP | ||
159 | Amarpur | Banka | Janardan Manjhi | JD(U) | Mrinal Shekhar | BJP | ||
160 | Dhoraiya | Banka | Manish Kumar | JD(U) | Bhudeo Choudhary | RLSP | ||
161 | Banka | Banka | Ram Narayan Mandal | BJP | Zafrul Hoda | RJD | ||
162 | Katoria | Banka | Sweety Sima Hembram | RJD | Nikki Hembram | BJP | ||
163 | Belhar | Banka | Girdhari Yadav | JD(U) | Manoj Yadav | BJP | ||
164 | Tarapur | Munger | M.L. Choudhary | JD(U) | Sakuni Choudhary | HAM | ||
165 | Munger | Munger | Vijay Kumar Vijay | RJD | Pranav Kumar | BJP | ||
166 | Jamalpur | Munger | Shailesh Kumar | JD(U) | Himanshu Kunvar | LJP | ||
167 | Suryagarha | Lakhisarai | Prahlad Yadav | RJD | Prem Ranjan Patel | BJP | ||
168 | Lakhisarai | Lakhisarai | Vijay Kumar Sinha | BJP | Ramanand Mandal | JD(U) | ||
169 | Sheikhpura | Sheikhpura | Randhir Kumar Soni | JD(U) | Naresh Saw | HAM | ||
170 | Barbigha | Sheikhpura | Sudarshan Kumar | INC | Sheo Kumar | RLSP | ||
171 | Asthawan | Nalanda | Jitendra Kumar | JD(U) | Chhote Lal Yadav | LJP | ||
172 | Biharsharif | Nalanda | Dr. Sunil Kumar | BJP | Mohd. Asghar Shamim | JD(U) | ||
173 | Rajgir | Nalanda | Ravi Jyoti Kumar | JD(U) | Satyadeo Narain Arya | BJP | ||
174 | Islampur | Nalanda | Chandrasen Prasad | JD(U) | Birendra Gope | BJP | ||
175 | Hilsa | Nalanda | Shakti Singh Yadav | RJD | Deepika Kumari | LJP | ||
176 | Nalanda | Nalanda | Shrawon Kumar | JD(U) | Kaushalendra Kumar | BJP | ||
177 | Harnaut | Nalanda | Hari Narayan Singh | JD(U) | Arun Kumar | LJP | ||
178 | Mokama | Patna | Anant Kumar Singh | Independent | Neeraj Kumar | JD(U) | ||
179 | Barh | Patna | Gyanendra Kumar Singh | BJP | Manoj Kumar | JD(U) | ||
180 | Bakhtiarpur | Patna | Ranvijay Singh | BJP | Aniruddh Kumar | RJD | ||
181 | Digha | Patna | Sanjiv Chaurasia | BJP | Rajeev Ranjan Prasad | JD(U) | ||
182 | Bankipur | Patna | Nitin Naveen | BJP | Kumar Ashish | INC | ||
183 | Kumhrar | Patna | Arun Kumar Sinha | BJP | Aquil Haider | INC | ||
184 | Patna Sahib | Patna | Nand Kishore Yadav | BJP | Santosh Mehta | RJD | ||
185 | Fatuha | Patna | Dr. Ramanand Yadav | RJD | Satyendra Kumar Singh | LJP | ||
186 | Danapur | Patna | Asha Devi | BJP | Raj Kishor Yadav | RJD | ||
187 | Maner | Patna | Bhai Virendra | RJD | Shrikant Nirala | BJP | ||
188 | Phulwari | Patna | Shyam Rajak | JD(U) | Rajeshwar Manjhi | HAM | ||
189 | Masaurhi | Patna | Rekha Devi | RJD | Nutan Paswan | HAM | ||
190 | Paliganj | Patna | Jay Vardhan Yadav | RJD | Ram Janm Sharma | BJP | ||
191 | Bikram | Patna | Siddharth | INC | Anil Kumar | BJP | ||
192 | Sandesh | Bhojpur | Arun Kumar | RJD | Sanjay Singh | BJP | ||
193 | Barhara | Bhojpur | Saroj Yadav | RJD | Asha Devi | BJP | ||
194 | Arrah | Bhojpur | Mohd Nawaz Alam | RJD | Amrendra Pratap Singh | BJP | ||
195 | Agiaon | Bhojpur | Prabhunath Prasad | JD(U) | Shivesh Kumar | BJP | ||
196 | Tarari | Bhojpur | Sudama Prasad | CPI(ML) Liberation | Gita Pandey | LJP | ||
197 | Jagdishpur | Bhojpur | Ram Vishun Singh | RJD | Rakesh Raushan | RLSP | ||
198 | Shahpur | Bhojpur | Rahul Tiwary | RJD | Visheshwar Ojha | BJP | ||
199 | Brahampur | Buxar | Shambhu Nath Yadav | RJD | Vivek Thakur | BJP | ||
200 | Buxar | Buxar | Munna Tiwari | INC | Pradeep Dubey | BJP | ||
201 | Dumraon | Buxar | Dadan Yadav | JD(U) | Ram Bihari Singh | RLSP | ||
202 | Rajpur | Buxar | Santosh Kumar Nirala | JD(U) | Bishawnath Ram | BJP | ||
203 | Ramgarh | Kaimur | Ashok Kumar Singh | BJP | Ambika Singh | RJD | ||
204 | Mohania | Kaimur | Niranjan Ram | BJP | Sanjay Kumar | INC | ||
205 | Bhabua | Kaimur | Anand Bhushan Pandey | BJP | Dr. Pramod Kumar Singh | JD(U) | ||
206 | Chainpur | Kaimur | Brij Kishor Bind | BJP | Mohd. Zama Khan | BSP | ||
207 | Chenari | Rohtas | Lalan Paswan | RLSP | Mangal Ram | INC | ||
208 | Sasaram | Rohtas | Ashok Kumar | RJD | Jawahar Prasad | BJP | ||
209 | Kargahar | Rohtas | Bashisht Singh | JD(U) | Birendra Kumar Singh | RLSP | ||
210 | Dinara | Rohtas | Jai Kumar Singh | JD(U) | Rajendra Prasad Singh | BJP | ||
211 | Nokha | Rohtas | Anita Devi | RJD | Rameshwar Prasad | BJP | ||
212 | Dehri | Rohtas | Mohd. Iliyas Hussain | RJD | Jitendra Kumar | RLSP | ||
213 | Karakat | Rohtas | Sanjay Kumar Singh | RJD | Rajeshwar Raj | BJP | ||
214 | Arwal | Arwal | Ravindra Singh | RJD | Chitranjan Kumar | BJP | ||
215 | Kurtha | Arwal | Satyadeo Singh | JD(U) | Ashok Kumar Verma | RLSP | ||
216 | Jehanabad | Jehanabad | Mundrika Singh Yadav | RJD | Praveen Kumar | RLSP | ||
217 | Ghosi | Jehanabad | Krishan Nandan Prasad Verma | JD(U) | Rahul Kumar | HAM | ||
218 | Makhdumpur | Jehanabad | Subedar Das | RJD | Jitan Ram Manjhi | HAM | ||
219 | Goh | Aurangabad | Manoj Kumar | BJP | Dr. Ranvijay Kumar | JD(U) | ||
220 | Obra | Aurangabad | Birendra Kumar Sinha | RJD | Chandra Bhushan Verma | RLSP | ||
221 | Nabinagar | Aurangabad | Virendra Kumar Singh | JD(U) | Gopal Narayan Singh | BJP | ||
222 | Kutumba | Aurangabad | Rajesh Kumar | INC | Santosh Kumar Suman | HAM | ||
223 | Aurangabad | Aurangabad | Anand Shankar Singh | INC | Ramadhar Singh | BJP | ||
224 | Rafiganj | Aurangabad | Ashok Kumar Singh | JD(U) | Pramod Kumar Singh | LJP | ||
225 | Gurua | Gaya | Rajiv Nandan | BJP | Ramchandra Prasad Singh | JD(U) | ||
226 | Sherghati | Gaya | Vinod Prasad Yadav | JD(U) | Mukesh Kumar Yadav | HAM | ||
227 | Imamganj | Gaya | Jitan Ram Manjhi | HAM | Uday Narain Choudhary | JD(U) | ||
228 | Barachatti | Gaya | Samta Devi | RJD | Sudha Devi | LJP | ||
229 | Bodh Gaya | Gaya | Kumar Sarvjeet | RJD | Shyamdeo Paswan | BJP | ||
230 | Gaya Town | Gaya | Prem Kumar | BJP | Priya Ranjan | INC | ||
231 | Tikari | Gaya | Abhay Kumar Sinha | JD(U) | Anil Kumar | HAM | ||
232 | Belaganj | Gaya | Surendra Prasad Yadav | RJD | Sharim Ali | HAM | ||
233 | Atri | Gaya | Kunti Devi | RJD | Arvind Kumar Singh | LJP | ||
234 | Wazirganj | Gaya | Awadhesh Kumar Singh | INC | Birendra Singh | BJP | ||
235 | Rajauli | Nawada | Prakash Veer | RJD | Arjun Ram | BJP | ||
236 | Hisua | Nawada | Anil Singh | BJP | Kaushal Yadav | JD(U) | ||
237 | Nawada | Nawada | Rajballabh Prasad | RJD | Indradeo Prasad | RLSP | ||
238 | Gobindpur | Nawada | Purnima Yadav | INC | Fula Devi | BJP | ||
239 | Warsaliganj | Nawada | Aruna Devi | BJP | Pradip Kumar | JD(U) | ||
240 | Sikandra | Jamui | Sudhir Kumar | INC | Subhas Chandra Bosh | LJP | ||
241 | Jamui | Jamui | Vijay Prakash | RJD | Ajoy Pratap | BJP | ||
242 | Jhajha | Jamui | Rabindra Yadav | BJP | Damodar Rawat | JD(U) | ||
243 | Chakai | Jamui | Savitri Devi | RJD | Sumit Kumar Singh | LJP | ||
District-wise
District | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Total | MahaGhatbandhan | NDA | Other | |
West Champaran | 9 | 3 | 5 | 1 |
East Champaran | 12 | 5 | 7 | 0 |
Sheohar | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
Sitamarhi | 8 | 6 | 2 | 0 |
Madhubani | 10 | 8 | 2 | 0 |
Supaul | 5 | 4 | 1 | 0 |
Araria | 6 | 4 | 2 | 0 |
Kishanganj | 4 | 4 | 0 | 0 |
Purnia | 7 | 6 | 1 | 0 |
Katihar | 7 | 4 | 2 | 1 |
Madhepura | 4 | 4 | 0 | 0 |
Saharsa | 4 | 4 | 0 | 0 |
Darbhanga | 10 | 8 | 2 | 0 |
Muzaffarpur | 11 | 6 | 3 | 2 |
Gopalganj | 6 | 4 | 2 | 0 |
Siwan district | 8 | 6 | 1 | 1 |
Saran | 10 | 8 | 2 | 0 |
Vaishali | 8 | 6 | 2 | 0 |
Samastipur | 10 | 10 | 0 | 0 |
Begusarai | 7 | 7 | 0 | 0 |
Khagaria | 4 | 4 | 0 | 0 |
Bhagalpur | 7 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
Banka | 5 | 4 | 1 | 0 |
Munger | 3 | 3 | 0 | 0 |
Lakhisarai | 2 | 1 | 1 | 0 |
Sheikhpura | 2 | 2 | 0 | 0 |
Nalanda | 7 | 6 | 1 | 0 |
Patna | 12 | 6 | 6 | 0 |
Bhojpur | 7 | 6 | 0 | 1 |
Buxar | 4 | 4 | 0 | 0 |
Kaimur | 4 | 0 | 4 | 0 |
Rohtas | 7 | 6 | 1 | 0 |
Arwal | 2 | 2 | 0 | 0 |
Jehanabad | 3 | 3 | 0 | 0 |
Aurangabad | 6 | 4 | 2 | 0 |
Gaya | 9 | 6 | 3 | 0 |
Nawada | 5 | 3 | 2 | 0 |
Jamui | 4 | 3 | 1 | 0 |
Bihar Assembly 2015; Caste-wise Main Parties
Party | Yadvas | SC | Muslims | Rajput | Kruis |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
RJD | 42 | 13 | 12 | 2 | 4 |
JDU | 11 | 10 | 05+1? | 6 | 11 |
Congress | 2 | 5 | 05 | 3 | 0 |
BJP | 6 | 9 | 0 | 8 | 3 |
CPI+RLP | 0 | 1 | 1 | 1 | |
Total | 61 | 38 | 24 | 19 | 19 |
- ----
- Elected MLAs caste-wise-2015
MLAs | Yadavas | SC | Muslims | Rajput | Koyiris | Bhumihars | Kurmi | Vaishya | Brahmins | Kayasta | others |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
243 | 61 | 38 | 24 | 19 | 19 | 17 | 16 | 16 | 10 | 3 | 20 |
Government formation
Janata Dal (United) leader Nitish Kumar sworn in as chief minister for the fifth time in a row on 20 November 2015 after the Mahagathbandhan alliance won a sweeping victory, taking 178 seats.[277]
- Nitish Kumar was sworn in Bihar Chief Minister for a fifth time on Friday 20-11-2015, at a grand event attended mostly by non-BJP leaders. The two sons of RJD chief Lalu Prasad — Tejaswi and Tej Pratap —and 26 others were also sworn in. Tejaswi Yadav, the younger son of Mr. Lalu Prasad, became Deputy Chief Minister.
- Apart from Nitish Kumar, 12 members each from the Janata Dal (United) and the Rashtriya Janata Dal and four from the Congress were administered the oath of office[278]
Voting percentage
A phase-wise analysis of the polling percentages puts the fifth and final phase on the top with a 60% turnout. The polling in this round, beat the 58.45% turnout recorded in the fourth phase, as also 53.74% voting in third phase, 55.45% in the second and 55.81% in the first phase.out. The polling in this round, beat the 58.45% turnout recorded in the fourth phase, as also 53.74% voting in third phase, 55.45% in the second and 55.81% in the first phase.
- 2015 - 56.8% ;2010 - 52.7% ; Oct 2005 - 45.9% ; 2000 - 62.6% ( Assebly Polls were held twice in 2005 due to a fractured verdict.[279]
- For Other statistics -see :Talk
Portfolios of Nitish Kumar's Cabinet Ministers-2015
- Patna: Nitish Kumar today took oath as Bihar Chief Minister along with 28 ministers, including RJD chief Lalu Prasad’s two sons Tejaswi and Tej Pratap, as the grand alliance government of RJD-JD(U)-Congress was sworn in at a mega ceremony attended by several top leaders from non-BJP parties.
- The 28 ministers, 19 of them first-timers, range from a dozen who studied up to various stages of school — including both of Lalu’s sons — to seven postgraduates, four of these from Lalu’s party. The CM is an electrical engineering graduate.
Besides Nitish, 12 members each from RJD and JD(U) and four from Congress were administered oath as ministers by Governor Ram Nath Kovind.
- Chief Minister
- Nitish Kumar - Chief Minister: Home, General Administration, Information & Public Communication. The Chief Minister Nitish Kumar, 64, is an electrical engineering graduate.
RJD Ministers:
- 1.Tejaswi Yadav (Won from Raghopur ) -Deputy Chief Minister-: Road Construction, Building Constructions & Backward Class Development;Lalu’s younger son, 26, is Nitish’s deputy and Roads Minister. A former cricketer, he played for Jharkhand and was also part of IPL for four seasons without a match. Tejaswi defeated the BJP’s Satish Kumar in Raghopur. Studied until Class IX.He is the fourth Deputy Chief Minister of Bihar & also the youngest.
- 2.Tej Pratap (Won from Mahua ) - Health, Forest and Environment, Backward & Extremely Backward Class Welfare Ministry ;Lalu’s elder son is Health Minister and No. 3 in the cabinet, after the CM and his Deputy CM brother. Declared his age as 25, which would make him “younger” than his brother as per records and the “youngest minister”. He defeated HAM’s Ravindra Rai, sitting MLA, in Mahua. Studied until Class XII; ran a motorbike showroom
- 3. Vijay Prakash ( Won from Jamui)- Labour Resources ;Rewarded with Labour Resources for his family’s loyalty to Lalu’s. Vijay Prakash, 45 and a postgraduate, is a brother of Banka RJD MP Jaiprakash Narayan Yadav and defeated Ajay Pratap Singh, son of former minister Narendra Singh, in Jamui.
- 4. Anita Devi (Won from Nokha)- Tourism ;, 45, studied till Class XII. She defeated BJP veteran Rameshwar Chaurasia in Nokha in what was her first election. She belongs to the EBC Nonia caste.
- 5.Muneshwar Chaudhary ( Won from Garkha)- Mining ;Mines Minister, 60, is the RJD’s state vice president. He defeated the BJP’s Gyanchand Manjhi in Garkha for his fifth term as MLA. Belongs to the Pasi scheduled caste
- 6.Chandrasekhar- Disaster Management ;53, is a second-time MLA from Madhepura, where he defeated the BJP’s Vijay Kumar Vimal. An MSc, he used to teach at a college. A Yadav leader with the RJD.
- 7.Dr. Abdul Ghafoor (Won from Mahisi)- Minority Development;Minority Affairs Minister, 56, is an MA and doctorate degree holder who taught at a college. The old Lalu aide defeated the LJP’s Chandan Kumar Sah in Mahisi for his fourth term as MLA.
- 8.Shiv Chandra Ram :Arts, Culture & Youth Affairs Minister, 44, is a graduate and the RJD’s state youth wing chief. He defeated the LJP’s Ramnath Ram in Rajapakad to become an MLA for the third time. An SC leader.
- 9. Ramvichar Rai (Won from Sahebganj)- Agriculture; 60, has been a minister and RJD chief whip earlier. He defeated Raju Kumar Singh of HAM in Sahebganj. Rai studied till Class X.
- 10. Chandrika Rai (Won from Parsa)- Transport Minister, 53, was an RJD minister under Rabri. Son of Daroga Rai, Bihar’s first Yadav CM, he is a postgraduate in arts. He defeated the LJP’s Chhotelal Rai in Parsa
- 11. Alok Kumar Mehta, ( Won from Ujiarpur)A former RJD MP, 44, he is Cooperatives Minister. He is known as a loyalist of Lalu’s family and said to have groomed Tejaswi in politics. An OBC Kushwaha and son of former minister Tulsidas Mehta, he defeated the RLSP’s Anant Kushwaha in Ujiyarpur.
- 12. Abdul Bari Siddiqui (Won from Alinagar)- Finance Ministry ;, 63, has been RJD minister before, as well as leader of opposition. He carries the image of a moderate acceptable across parties and was widely believed to become Deputy CM. He won once again from Alinagar, defeating the BJP’s Misrilal Yadav this time. A product of the JP Movement, he studied till Class XII.
JDU:
- 1. Kapildev Kamat- Minister for Panchayati Raj, 60, is an EBC Kyot leader with his roots in the JP movement. He defeated the LJP’s Vinod Kumar in Babubarhi. He did not complete his matriculation.
- 2. Madan Sahni ( Won from Gaura Buram)- Food and Civil Supplies, Consumer Protection Minister, 44, is the JD(U)’s EBC Mallah face. He is a second-term MLA and a graduate. He defeated the LJP’s Vinod Sahni in Gauraboram
- 3. Khurshid Urf Firoz Ahmad ( Won from Sikta)- Sugar Cane Industry;53, is also known as Khurshid. He defeated BJP heavyweight Dilip Verma in Sikta. He studied till Class X and is a second-term JD(U) MLA.
- 4.Santosh Kumar Nirala ( Won from Rajpur)- SC/ST Development ;Dalit leader, 44, gets SC/ST Welfare. he came from the BSP, joined the JD(U) and beat Vishwanath Ram (BJP) in Rajpur. Second-time MLA; graduate.
- 5.Kumari Manju Verma (Won from Cheria Bariarpur)- Social Welfare ;46, defeated the LJP’s Anil Kumar in Cheria Bariarpur. Studied till Class XII. An OBC Kushwaha leader with the JD(U).
- 6.Shailesh Kumar, ( Won from Jamalpur)Rural Works Minister, 52, became MLA for a third time beating the LJP’s Himanshi Kuwar in Jamalpur. An EBC Dhanuk leader with JD(U); Master's degree.
- 7. Maheshwar Hazari- Urban development;46, is with the JD(U), an SC leader related to Ram Vilas Paswan and a son of leader Ramsevak Hazari. He defeated Ramchandra Paswan’s son Prince Raj in a family battle in Kalyanpur. Studied until XII.
- 8.Krishna Nandan Prasad Verma ( Won from Ghosi)- PHED & Law ; OBC Kushwaha leader, 45, is a graduate who has become Minister for PHE and Law. He defeated sitting Ghoshi MLA and HAM candidate Rahul Kumar, a son of former MP Jagdish Sharma.
- 9. Jay Kumar Singh (Won from Dinara)- Industry, Science & Technology{Age 46, is a civil engineering graduate. He defeated the BJP’s Rajendra Singh to take Dinara for a second time. An upper caste Rajput with the JD(U).}
- 10. Shrawan Kumar, (Won from Nalanda)OBC Kurmi leader, 56, gets Rural Development and Parliamentary Affairs. He studied till Class XII. A former JD(U) chief whip as well as minister, he is said to be close to the CM. He defeated the BJP’s Kaushlendra Kumar in Nalanda.
- 11. Rajiv Ranjan Singh alias Lalan Singh (MLC)- Water Resource ;62; he has Water Resources. A former JD(U) state president and now an MLC, he was the Munger MP between 2009 and 2014. Once close to Nitish, he fell out with him, patched up and came back to become a minister. An upper caste Bhumihar.
- 12. Bijendra Prasad Yadav (Won from Supaul)- Power ;At 69, the most senior minister. He retains Energy. A JD(U) veteran hailing from the JP movement, he has been an MLA since 1990 and is seen as close to Sharad Yadav. He studied until XII and is widely respected for his understanding of politics and clean image. He defeated the BJP’s Kishore Kumar Munna in Supaul.
Congress:
- 1.Madan Mohan Jha- Revenue and Land Reforms Minister, 56, is the state Congress’s Brahmin face. An MSc and PhD, he is an MLC and a son of former minister Nagendra Jha.
- 2. Abdul Jalil Mastan,( Won from Amour)Registration and Excise Minister, 57, is a veteran Muslim face with the Congress and won his eighth MLA poll, beating the BJP’s Saba Jafar in Amour. Once refused to become a minister in Rabri Devi’s cabinet. Passed Class XII in commerce.
- 3.Awdhesh Kumar Singh (won from Wazirganj)- Animal and Fishery Development ;One of two upper caste Rajput ministers, he gets Animal Husbandry and Fisheries. Veteran Congressman, 59, defeated the BJP’s Virendra Singh in Wazirganj. He was a minister in the Chandrashekhar Singh government too.
- 4.Ashok Choudhary (MLC)- Education & IT ;Bihar Congress president, 47, is an MLC who gets Human Resource Development and Information Technology. The Dalit face of the Bihar Congress, he is a son of former minister Mahavir Choudhary and was a minister in Rabri’s government. Has a doctorate degree.
- Ministers from RJD who took oath: Tejaswi Yadav, Tej Pratap Yadav, Abdul Bari Siddiqui, Alok Kumar Mehta, Chandrika Rai, Ram Vichar Rai, Shiv Chandra Ram, Abdul Gafoor, Chandrasekhar, Munneshwar Chaudhary, Anita Devi and Vijay Prakash.
- Those from JD(U): Bijendra Prasad Yadav, Rajiv Ranjan Singh alias Lallan Singh, Shrawan Kumar, Jay Kumar Singh, Krishnandan Prasad Varma, Maheshwar Hazari, Shailesh Kumar, Manju Varma, Santosh Kumar Nirala, Khursheed alias Firoz Ahmad, Madan Sahni and Kapildeo Kamat apart from Nitish Kumar.
See also
References
- ↑ "Bihar election results vote share: 7.8 pct more votes for Nitish Kumar’s Mahagatbandhan gives it another 120 seats". The Financial Express. 9 November 2015. Retrieved 10 April 2016.
- ↑ "Amit Shah sets Mission 185+ for Bihar BJP in 2015 Assembly Polls". Bihar Prabha. Retrieved 2015-01-24.
- ↑ "Bihar Assembly Elections 2015: Jitan Ram Manjhi has become ‘announcement minister’, says Sushil Modi". india.com. Retrieved 2015-02-01.
- ↑ "6 Parties of Janata Parivar Announce Merger, Mulayam Singh Yadav to be Chief of New Party".
- ↑ "Six parties unite to form Janata Parivar; Mulayam is the new party chief".
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- ↑ "Bihar election: BJP starts campaign, wins over Manjhi to its camp".
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- ↑ "Rise of Janata parivar".
- ↑ Catch News. Voters dissatisfied with Nitish & Lalu will choose us, not BJP, says CPI(ML) chief
- 1 2 "Left parties to contest all 243 Bihar Assembly seats". India Today (Patna). Indo-Asian News Service. July 24, 2015. Retrieved July 25, 2015.
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- ↑ "Bihar Assembly polls likely in Sept-Oct, says CEC".
- ↑ "Bihar Assembly polls: Haven't received official proposal regarding Janata Parivar merger, says CEC".
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- ↑ "36 Seats in Bihar to Have Electronic Voting Machines With Paper Trail Facility".
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- ↑ "General Election to the State Legislative Assembly of Bihar, 2015- Use of EVMs with Voter Verifiable Paper Audit Trail System(VVPAT)-reg." (PDF).
- ↑ "Bihar polls from mid-October, maybe spread over 4-7 phases".
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- ↑ "SVEEP document" (PDF).
- ↑ "Vote and make me proud: Muzaffarpur to citizens".
- ↑ http://www.dnaindia.com/india/report-bihar-polls-record-57-in-first-phase-2134264
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(help) - ↑ "Why India's migrants are unable to vote". BBC News.
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- ↑ "NRIs can vote, not migrant labourers: Centre and EC". The Times of India.
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- ↑ "Cross mark is now NOTA symbol". The Times of India.
- ↑ "Now, 'NOTA' has an electoral symbol too". dna. 18 September 2015. Retrieved 18 September 2015.
- ↑ Jain, Bharti (18 September 2015). "'None of the Above' option on EVMS to carry its own symbol from Bihar polls". The Times of India. Retrieved 18 September 2015.
- ↑ "Election Commission publishes final voters list for Bihar elections".
- ↑ "Election Commission publishes final voters list for Bihar Assembly polls".
- ↑ Sanjit Oberai. "Infograph: Caste, Community and Gender, Bihar’s Voters in Numbers". The Quint.
- ↑ "Bihar polls: UAVs, sniffer dogs in action for strict security".
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- ↑ "On the eve of Bihar polls, Maoist belt turns into war zone".
- ↑ "Election Commission's neutrality: Will Zaidi fit in Seshan's shoes?".
- ↑ "Bihar legislative polls: Setback to Nitish, Lalu as ‘grand alliance’ scores 10".
- ↑ "BJP-led NDA wins 14 out of 24 seats in Bihar Legislative Council elections". IBNLive.
- ↑ "BJP-led NDA wins 13 out of 24 seats in Bihar Legislative Council elections, deals a huge blow to JDU-RJD alliance".
- ↑ "BJP wins seven of nine seats of Bihar Legislative Council". The Times of India.
- ↑ "In poll-bound Bihar, Patna & 20 districts get backward status".
- ↑ "Hindu proportion of India’s population less than 80%: Census 2011".
- ↑ "Muslim share of population up 0.8%, Hindus’ down 0.7% between 2001 and 2011". The Times of India.
- 1 2 "Bihar elections among factors in religious data of Census 2011 release".
- ↑ "Now, Pappu Yadav gets 'Y' category security".
- ↑ National Bureau. "Jitan Ram Manjhi gets Z-plus security". The Hindu.
- ↑ "Nitish Kumar government hikes Dearness Allowance for employees, pensioners". timesofindia-economictimes.
- ↑ "Nitish kumar’s poll bonanza for backward classes; 50% quota in Bihar govt contracts".
- ↑ "Bihar: BJP, JD(U) set for a war of sops ahead of Assembly polls".
- ↑ "Sops for upper caste students".
- 1 2 3 "Nitish Kumar’s gambit: temple fund, 2 EBCs added to SC/ST list".
- ↑ "CM playing ‘football’ with Nishads: BJP".
- ↑ "With eye on polls, grants given to 609 madrassas".
- ↑ "Tax rebate to Manjhi biopic raises eyebrows".
- ↑ "Is Bihar's Mountain Man a vote-winner? Nitish government makes 'Manjhi' film tax-free... while rivals accuse him of gesture politics".
- ↑ "http://indianexpress.com/article/india/politics/in-bihar-caste-rejig-the-backward-list-grows-longer/". External link in
|title=
(help) - ↑ Utpal Bhaskar. "Foreign diplomats line up for Bihar elections". http://www.livemint.com/. External link in
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(help) - ↑ "How Bihar Elections Could Shape India's Future". The Huffington Post.
- ↑ "Bihar polls: Jitan Ram Manjhi announces alliance with BJP".
- ↑ "Ram Vilas Paswan-Jitan Ram Manjhi battle for Mahadalit leadership making it tough for BJP in Bihar".
- ↑ "Non-inclusion of Paswans in Mahadalit list angers Paswan".
- ↑ "Bihar CM includes Paswan caste in Mahadalit category".
- ↑ "Does Bihar know how many tribals live in the State?".
- ↑ "27 lakh SC & ST families to benefit from Food Law in Bihar".
- ↑ "Bihar assembly elections 2015: Experiments in the caste lab of Bihar". Tehelka.
- ↑ "Special package for Tharu tribals in Bihar".
- ↑ "Stage set for tribal all-woman battalion".
- ↑ "Bihar state EBC list" (PDF).
- ↑ "Election Commission in a spot: Bihar has 6.01 crore adults, but more than 6.21 crore voters".
- ↑ "How Bihar was won".
- ↑ "Now Lalu wants to do a Maya in Bihar".
- ↑ "The caste factor while casting votes in Indian elections".
- ↑ AM Jigeesh. "Caste determines Bihar’s electoral arithmetic". The Hindu Business Line.
- ↑ "Nitish gives ‘Maha Dalit' benefits to Paswan community".
- ↑ "Why did Narendra Modi suddenly turn to caste?".
- ↑ "Bihar poised to return to politics of caste, religion".
- ↑ "Nitish in caste trouble".
- ↑ "Voice of unity for EBC voters". The Telegraph.
- ↑ "Bihar elections still remain about slicing and dicing caste, EBCs are the wild card".
- ↑ "Frenemies: BJP’s tie-up with Jitan Ram Manjhi could give it edge in Bihar polls".
- ↑ "Bihar voters in dilemma".
- ↑ "BJP ties up with OBC leader Upendra Kushwaha in Bihar".
- ↑ "Jitan Ram Manjhi emerges critical player in poll-bound Bihar". The Times of India.
- ↑ "BJP may bring in Kushwaha as OBC face".
- ↑ "Can RJD-JD(U) stop BJP’s rise in Bihar?".
- ↑ "Bihar’s Mahadalits pick sides in Nitish-Manjhi tussle".
- ↑ "Bihar polls: Rallying behind Jitan Ram Manjhi, Musahars vow to unseat Nitish Kumar".
- ↑ "Bihar polls: People made me cry a lot, says BJP’s ‘pucca Musalman’". The Indian Express. 30 October 2015. Retrieved 10 April 2016.
- ↑ "Will the Muslim militia polarise community on caste lines in Bihar's Imamganj?".
- ↑ "Is Nitish Kumar working on a new Bihar poll strategy that excludes Laloo and Mulayam?".
- ↑ "Brahmins In India".
- ↑ "Bihar brings all Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes' families under National Food Security Act".
- ↑ "Nitish banks on caste calculations, Muslims".
- ↑ "Five-phase Bihar polls to begin from Oct 12, counting on November 8: Election Commission". The Times of India.
- ↑ "Lalu, Nitish seal the deal: RJD, JD(U) form alliance for Bihar polls, seat sharing talks on cards". Firstpost.
- ↑ "Nitish Kumar and Lalu Prasad Yadav alliance may be a 90-seat worry for BJP".
- ↑ "Lalu leads march for caste census data".
- ↑ "Lalu's Ultimatum to Modi Government on Caste Census Data".
- ↑ "Caste census data demand is ‘jehad’: Lalu".
- ↑ "‘Ram Vilas Dalit face wherever you go, Jitan Ram Manjhi can be Mahadalit face’".
- ↑ "Lalu Prasad, Nitish Kumar to be hit hardest if caste data released: Paswan".
- ↑ "Lalu Prasad Yadav , Nitish Kumar to be hit hardest if caste data released: Ram Vilas Paswan".
- ↑ "Caste census data to be release after error correction: Sushil Modi".
- ↑ "Won't contest Bihar polls, will devote time for campaigning, says Nitish Kumar".
- ↑ "Won't contest Bihar elections: Nitish Kumar".
- ↑ "Nitish Kumar Announces Seat-Sharing Formula For Bihar Elections: JD(U)-RJD To Contest On 100 Seats Each, Congress 40".
- ↑ "Bihar elections: NCP pulls out of anti-BJP alliance, may contest alone".
- ↑ "Bihar polls: Nitish Kumar releases ‘joint list’ of 242 candidates, OBCs get lion’s share".
- ↑ "Nitish Kumar yields, Lalu Prasad gets both his sons an Assembly ticket each".
- ↑ "Nitish-led alliance releases list of 242 candidates for Bihar polls".
- ↑ "OBCs most favoured in alliance plan".
- ↑ "In Bihar elections, it is my social combination versus yours".
- ↑ "Bihar elections: OBCs and Dalits 70% in Nitish list, upper castes 42% in BJP". The Indian Express. 24 September 2015.
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- ↑ "Bihar". Retrieved 10 April 2016.
- ↑ "Har Ghar Dastak: Nitish's Bihar strategy is old fashioned door-to-door campaigning".
- ↑ "Nitish sounds poll bugle with ‘Har Ghar Dastak’".
- ↑ Sajjad, Mohammad (8 November 2015). "How Nitish Kumar and Lalu Yadav won Bihar". rediff.com. Retrieved 9 November 2015.
- ↑ "They may have 'amicably' come to a seat-sharing agreement, but 15 months of tumultuous relationship later, Nitish Kumar and Lalu Yadav still remain frenemies". Retrieved 10 April 2016.
- ↑ "Giant slayer". Retrieved 10 April 2016.
- ↑ "Team 178: Faces behind Grand Alliance’s victory in Bihar polls".
- ↑ "Amit Shah vs Prashant Kishor: Who will be the wizard of Bihar election?".
- ↑ "BJP's hi-tech chariots and JDU's Jan Bhagidari Rath setting mood for a high-voltage battle in Bihar".
- ↑ "Nitish, BJP to woo Bihari diaspora".
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- ↑ "At Buxar, Modi gives BJP campaign a brazen communal spin; plays on the fears of Dalits".
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- ↑ "Will never allow quota on religious lines, PM Narendra Modi says".
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- ↑ "Modi again alleges Nitish, Lalu conspiring to take away share of dalits, backwards quota".
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- ↑ "Bihar polls: Grand Alliance's idea of reservations on the basis of religion is fraught with danger, says FM Arun Jaitley".
- ↑ "All those who are involved in the traditional caste psyche will suffer a big setback: FM Arun Jaitley".
- ↑ "Nitish, Lalu had together sought religion-based quota in 2005, says PM Narendra Modi".
- ↑ "Dalit Muslims, Dalit Christians & quota: What is it all about?". timesofindia-economictimes.
- ↑ "On video, what Lalu Prasad Yadav, Nitish Kumar said about quota for Muslims". The Indian Express. 6 November 2015.
- ↑ "BJP creates OBC morcha ahead of Bihar election".
- ↑ "With eye on Bihar polls, BJP to set up new OBC front".
- ↑ "BJP Questions JD(U)'s Source of Funds for Poll Campaign".
- ↑ "'Will get rid of unholy Nitish-Lalu combine': Ex-CM Manjhi ties up with BJP for Bihar polls".
- ↑ "Sons and daughters crowd Bihar poll space".
- ↑ "BJP finalises seat sharing for Bihar polls".
- ↑ "Five Vote-splitters of Bihar".
- ↑ "Winnability, caste, age: Amit Shah’s 3-point formula for Bihar polls". The Indian Express. 22 September 2015.
- ↑ "Bihar polls: BJP declares 11 candidates in third list". The Indian Express. 20 September 2015.
- ↑ "Eye on Lalu’s vote cache, BJP fields 22 Yadavs".
- ↑ "BJP gave tickets to seven candidates from the Teli community".
- ↑ "Yadav vs Yadav: How BJP is attempting to break Lalu's traditional vote bank". timesofindia-economictimes.
- ↑ "Bihar polls: BJP releases second list of 99 candidates".
- ↑ "Paswan, Prasad get fresh security layer for Bihar campaign". The Times of India.
- ↑ "Two Mahadalit Heavyweights To Face Off In Maoist-hit Imamganj". The Huffington Post.
- ↑ "Bihar polls: BJP releases vision document, promises 'much-awaited' development". The Times of India.
- ↑ "Samajwadi Party teams up with Pappu Yadav, NCP, 3 others to form third front". timesofindia-economictimes.
- ↑ "Mulayam front suffers big blow, NCP to go it alone".
- ↑ "Bihar polls: NCP quits Third Front, cites Mulayam Singh's 'pro-BJP statement'".
- ↑ "Left parties reach seat-sharing for Bihar polls". The Hindu. PTI. September 11, 2015. Retrieved September 12, 2015.
- ↑ "OBCs, EBCs, dalits dominate CPI list of 81 candidates". The Times of India.
- ↑ "3 Muslim parties enter Bihar, 3 others vow to thwart them". The Indian Express. 1 October 2015.
- ↑ "MIM in serious fight in Bihar: Asaduddin Owaisi".
- ↑ "BJP appoints Dalit governor eyeing backward votes as Owaisi hints at jumping into Bihar fray to woo Muslims".
- ↑ "AIMIM need to work to remove Muslim only party image: Asaduddin Owaisi".
- ↑ "Can Owaisi break new ground in Bihar and reverse the past trend of the Hindi belt?".
- ↑ "Asaduddin Owaisi’s Kishanganj rally makes JD(U), RJD and Congress nervous".
- ↑ "Bihar elections: Owaisi wants special package for Seemanchal".
- ↑ "Nitish, Lalu responsible for 'backward' Seemanchal: Owaisi".
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- ↑ "Bihar polls ground report: Smiling Modi, grim Nitish". dailyo.in.
- ↑ "MIM in serious fight in Bihar: Asaduddin Owaisi".
- ↑ "Akbaruddin Owaisi calls PM Modi 'Shaitan' and 'Zaalim'; blames him for 2002 Gujarat riots".
- ↑ "अकबरुद्दीन ने किया पीएम मोदी के खिलाफ आपत्तिजनक भाषा का प्रयोग" (in Hindi).
- ↑ "Modi a tyrant and a devil says Akbaruddin Owaisi".
- ↑ "As Asaduddin Owaisi campaigns across Seemanchal, Muslims ask: Will he unite or divide votes?". The Indian Express. 28 October 2015.
- ↑ "Owaisi ripples in 6 border seats".
- ↑ "AIMIM Names 6 Candidates for Bihar Elections". NDTV.com. 5 October 2015.
- ↑ PTI (16 June 2015). "Will contest the Bihar assembly elections with full preparation and strength, says Mayawati". The Hindu. Retrieved 18 September 2015.
- ↑ Thakur, Meenal (11 September 2015). "Bihar polls: After SP, BSP to contest all seats independently". http://www.livemint.com/. Retrieved 18 September 2015. External link in
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(help) - ↑ ANI (2015-07-13). "BSP releases first candidates list for Bihar polls". Business Standard News. Retrieved 2015-08-01.
- ↑ NewsWire (2015-07-12). "BSP names 49 candidates for Bihar polls". CanIndia NEWS. Retrieved 2015-08-01.
- ↑ Pankaj ShahPankaj Shah, TNN (26 July 2015). "Maya set to play dalit trump card in Bihar polls". The Times of India. Retrieved 10 August 2015.
- ↑ PTI (6 September 2015). "Modi government being 'remote-controlled' by RSS, Mayawati says". The Times of India. Retrieved 18 September 2015.
- ↑ Service, Tribune News (18 September 2015). "Modi govt being ‘remote-controlled’ by RSS: Mayawati". http://www.tribuneindia.com/news/nation/modi-govt-being-remote-controlled-by-rss-mayawati/129474.html. Retrieved 18 September 2015. External link in
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(help) - ↑ "Modi government being remote-controlled by RSS: Mayawati : India, News". India Today. 6 September 2015. Retrieved 18 September 2015.
- ↑ TNN (7 September 2015). "Team BSP marches to Bihar". The Times of India. Retrieved 18 September 2015.
- ↑ Ashish TripathiAshish Tripathi, TNN (9 September 2015). "Mayawati accuses Modi govt of releasing religion-based census to woo voters in Bihar". The Times of India. Retrieved 18 September 2015.
- ↑ PTI (10 September 2015). "Mayawati seeks more security for Bihar polls". The Hindu. Retrieved 18 September 2015.
- ↑ "BSP supremo Mayawati seeks more security forces for Bihar elections". timesofindia-economictimes. 9 September 2015. Retrieved 18 September 2015.
- ↑ Kumar, Madhuri KumarMadhuri (18 September 2015). "‘BSP likely to cut into dalit votes, spoil NDA show’". The Times of India. Retrieved 18 September 2015.
- ↑ Shah, Pankaj (13 October 2015). "Mayawati attacks SP, says Mulayam is supporting BJP". The Times of India. Retrieved 20 October 2015.
- ↑ Mohan, Archis (20 October 2015). "Mayawati, the unlikely ally of Bihar's 'Grand Alliance'". Business Standard Opinion. Retrieved 20 October 2015.
- ↑ "BSP Chief Mayawati Promises Quota for Upper Caste Poor". NDTV.com. 13 October 2015. Retrieved 20 October 2015.
- ↑ "NCP broke ties with SP in Bihar because of BJP, says Mayawati".
- ↑ "Purnea MP Pappu Yadav forms new Jan Adhikar Party".
- ↑ "Expelled RJD MP Pappu Yadav floats new party".
- ↑ "Swaraj Abhiyan may support parties in Bihar polls: Yogendra Yadav". dna.
- ↑ "Shiv Sena says will contest over 150 seats in Bihar polls".
- ↑ "Shiv Sena says will contest over 150 seats in Bihar polls". Yahoo News India. 17 September 2015.
- ↑ "SP teams up with Pappu, NCP, 3 others to form third front".
- ↑ "From corridors of UK bank to colonies of fishermen".
- ↑ "JVM-P to support Bihar alliance against BJP". The Times of India.
- ↑ "AAP not to contest Bihar assembly election". Times of India. Retrieved 21 May 2015.
- ↑ "ABP News Opinion Poll: The mood in Bihar". ABP News Bureau. 22 May 2015. Retrieved 25 July 2015.
- ↑ "ABP News-Nielsen opinion poll: Nitish Kumar’s wave gaining momentum in Bihar". ABP Live.
- ↑ "ABP News-Nielsen opinion poll: JD(U)-RJD-Congress alliance to badhat, Nitish Kumar’s wave gaining down in Bihar". ABP News Bureau. 24 July 2015. Retrieved 25 July 2015.
- ↑ "BJP allies get majority". Deccan Herald. 10 September 2015. Retrieved 10 September 2015.
- ↑ "Lalu-Nitish alliance surges ahead of BJP-led combine in India TV-CVoter poll in Bihar".
- ↑ "ABP News- Nielsen Opinion Poll: JD(U) neck and neck with NDA in Bihar, to win 122 seats".
- ↑ "Modi-led NDA to get massive mandate in Bihar, says Zee News survey".
- ↑ "BJP and Nitish-Lalu alliance neck and neck in Bihar: Times Now-CVoter survey".
- ↑ "Infoelections -Leadtech shows NDA at 168".
- ↑ "Infoelections -CNN-IBN shows NDA at 95, Releases Online Opinion Poll Results 2015".
- ↑ "Infoelections -ABP News shows NDA at 95, Releases Online Opinion Poll Results 2015".
- ↑ "Bihar Election: ITG-Cicero poll predicts a tight fight".
- ↑ http://www.newsnation.in/article/93152-nns-opinion-poll-nda-majority-bihar.html. Missing or empty
|title=
(help) - ↑ "NDA slightly ahead of grand alliance in Bihar photofinish, says India TV-CVoter pre-poll survey".
- ↑ "Bihar polls cost state exchequer Rs 300 crore". The Times of India.
- ↑ "India’s greatest feat". The Express Tribune. 7 November 2015.
- ↑ "Bihar elections: Countdown ends, counting all set to begin". The Times of India.
- ↑ "Bihar polls: 'No electrification, no vote' at Saran's Chandila village". The Economic Times.
- ↑ "Bihar election: Villagers boycott polls, want bijli first in Chandila". intoday.in.
- 1 2 "Bihar polls: TV channel drops exit poll that predicted Alliance sweep". Indian Express. 5 November 2015.
- ↑ "ABP News-Nielsen Bihar Exit Poll 2015". infoelections.com.
- ↑ BS Web Team (6 November 2015). "A tale of two exit polls that were polls apart". business-standard.com.
- ↑ "Grand Alliance is Making Government in Bihar According to Exit Poll of Axis". Navbharat Times.
- ↑ http://indianexpress.com/article/india/politics/bihar-elections-tv-channel-drops-exit-poll-that-predicted-alliance-sweep/| Indian express
- ↑ "इस नए Exit Poll से महागठबंधन की खिली बांछें और लोगों में बढ़ी जिज्ञासा". Khabar.NDTV.com (in Hindi). 6 November 2015.
- ↑ "India Today - Cicero Bihar Exit Poll 2015". infoelections.com.
- ↑ "BJP Gets 125 of Bihar's 243 Seats: NDTV's Exit Poll". infoelections. Retrieved 2015-11-06.
- ↑ "India TV-CVoter exit poll projects clear win for Nitish-led grand alliance in Bihar". India TV News.
- ↑ "Bihar Assembly Elections 2015 - Exit Poll". Today's Chanakya. Archived from the original on 22 December 2015. Retrieved 2015-11-05.
- ↑ "Bihar Bihar Election Results 2015". infoelections.com.
- ↑ "Bihar administration gears up for counting".
- ↑ "EVMs in strongrooms, CISF jawans on guard". The Times of India.
- ↑ "Nota polled highest in Bihar till date".
- ↑ "Four parties that did worse than Nota this Bihar election".
- ↑ "Bihar election results 2015: 1 in every 4 new members in Assembly is a Yadav". The Times of India. Retrieved 10 April 2016.
- ↑ "Bihar verdict: How RJD, Congress, JDU turned vote share to seats". Retrieved 16 November 2015.
- ↑ "Partywise Result". eciresults.nic.in. Retrieved 24 November 2015.
- ↑ http://eci.nic.in/eci_main/StatisticalReports/AE2015/Stat_Bihar_AE2015.pdf
- ↑ "Bihar poll results: Complete list of winners". IBNLive.
- ↑ "Constituencywise-All Candidates". Retrieved 10 April 2016.
- ↑ ANI (20 November 2015). "Nitish Kumar sworn in as Bihar Chief Minister for fifth time". Retrieved 10 April 2016.
- ↑ Amarnath Tewary. "Bihar Assembly polls 2015: Nitish Kumar takes over as Bihar Chief Minister for third time". The Hindu. Retrieved 10 April 2016.
- ↑ http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/elections/bihar-elections-2015/Bihar-sees-highest-turnout-in-15-years/articleshow/49680562.cms
- ↑ "Nitish Kumar Cabinet: Complete list of Ministers with portfolios". Retrieved 10 April 2016.
- ↑ "Bihar: Here is a list of ministers in Nitish Kumar’s cabinet with portfolios". dna. 21 November 2015. Retrieved 10 April 2016.
- ↑ http://indianexpress.com/article/india/india-news-india/nitish-kumarss-team-7-masters-9-grads-and-12-who-went-to-school/
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