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Saturday, November 7, 2015

2015 Bihar Assembly Elections Results Sunday Nov 08,2015

 

Grand Alliance Headed for Clear Majority in Bihar

JD(U)'s Nitish Kumar is set to rule Bihar for another five years. 

Naveen Patnaik Congratulates Nitish Kumar Over Bihar Poll Victory

The counting began at 8 AM on Sunday. Votes are locked in 62,780 EVMs with 14,580 officials on duty for the counting process in Patna and other districts.

The fate of 3450 candidates, including 272 women, will be decided during the day.
The five-phase elections started on October 12 and ended on November 5.

Nitish Kumar's JDU and  Lalu Prasad Yadav's RJD each contested 101 of Bihar's 243 seats.

As Bihar awaits for the result, early leads from the Election Commission show the JD(U)-RJD-Congress Grand Alliance ahead of the BJP-led National Democratic Alliance (NDA)

The confusion over exit polls for the Bihar elections seemed to be continuing over even trends in counting, with different television channels showing different coalitions as being ahead

 

The JDU party workers hopes the grand coalition wins.In Janata Dal(United) office here is a floor to roof poster of the Bihar Chief Minister, with the words Aaage badhta rahe Bihar, phir ek bar Nitish Kumar [If Bihar is to continue moving forward, once more Nitish Kumar] emblazoned across it.

At 11 am, Rajya Sabha TV showed the Grand Alliance ahead in 145 seats as against 88 for the BJP-led alliance in the 243-member assembly. NDTV showed the JD(U)-led alliance ahead with 136 seats as against 95 for the NDA

The biggest gainer, according to initial trends, is Lalu Prasad’s Rashtriya Janata Dal, which is set to vastly improve its previous tally of just 22 seats in the 2010 polls.
Bihar Result Places Lalu Yadav Centrestage Again

Lalu Prasad Yadav's youngest son - 26-year-old Tejaswi, who is tipped to be his political heir - and elder Tej Pratap, 27, won their maiden elections this time from Raghopur and Mahua
Ministerial Berths for Lalu's Sons Tejaswi, Tej Pratap? Why Not, Says Sister Misa

After the 2014 Lok Sabha polls, this was the second major setback for the Narendra Modi-Amit Shah duo after the BJP’s loss in the Delhi assembly elections.

Lalu Prasad Yadav - a two-time chief minister - has not contested this election following his conviction in a fodder scam case.  He will be barred from contesting an election for six years.

Janata Dal-United (JD-U) leader Nitish Kumar will remain the chief minister of Bihar, RJD leader Lalu Prasad said on Sunday, after the Grand Alliance trounced the BJP in Assembly elections

Addressing the media , Lalu Prasad also said that his party and the JD-U will build a campaign against Prime Minister Narendra Modi nationwide.
Hailing Nitish Kumar’s leadership, Lalu Prasad said: “I congratulate Nitish Kumar. Nitish Kumar will run the government.”
He said Bihar will develop in a major way under Nitish Kumar’s leadership.
“The people of Bihar have wiped out the BJP, chased out the BJP,” Lalu Prasad thundered, adding that the BJP combine’s defeat would have a major impact on national politics.
He said he would also go to Varanasi in neighbouring Uttar Pradesh to see if Modi had fulfilled his election promises in his Lok Sabha constituency.


A victory for Modi in Bihar would have helped to deflate the Opposition which is seeking to corner the PM over what it says is jobless growth and for failing to rein in hardline Hindu groups campaigning on issues that are seen weakening secularism in multi-faith, modern India.

The outcome will also possibly set the political momentum for at least four crucial state elections -– Tamil Nadu, West Bengal, Kerala and Assam -– next year and then in the key state of Uttar Pradesh in 2017.

At 12:15 am, the Election Commission of India says that the Grand Alliance was way ahead with leads in 158 constituencies, out of 243 seats in the Bihar Assembly. The BJP-led alliance was leading in 63 seats. Among the others, while the Communist Party of India (ML) (Liberation) was ahead in two seats, Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) was in one and Independents in seven places.

12.45 a.m: Bihar BJP leader Sushil Modi concedes defeat, says party bows before people’s mandate and congratulates Lalu and Nitish on their victory

The BJP, the largest single party in the world, is reduced to number three in Bihar. The results could not be worse for the party in a high stakes election. At the last count it had won 52 seats, of the 160 it contested.

 Bihar election results have given a clear mandate to Nitish Kumar-led RJD-JD(U)-Congress alliance
Though Nitish Kumar owes his victory to a powerful social coalition of backward classes and Muslims, he would be heading an inherently fragile coalition of three parties which are quite different from one another temperamentally and culturally


Nitish Kumar forged a formidable Muslim-Yadav-Kurmi coalition to which a significant section of the extremely backward classes (EBCs) got drawn

 A 7.8 % more votes for the JDU-RJD-Congress alliance over BJP-led NDA's tally fetched it another 120 seats catapulting the Nitish Kumar-led coalition to a landslide two-third majority, according to an analysis of Bihar poll results.

The Grand Secular Alliance with 41.9 % votes got 178 seats in a Hosue of 243 while the NDA with 34.1 per cent votes could get only 58 seats, final election data showed.

Lalu Prasad's RJD with 18.4 per cent votes bagged 80 seats to emerge as the single largest party while Nitish Kumar's JDU garnered 16.8 per cent votes to notch 71 seats. They both contested 101 seats

Congress, the third partner in the Grand Secular Alliance, fared creditably winning 27 of the 41 seats it contested. It polled 6.7 per cent votes.

The BJP, which contested 157 seats, polled the highest number of votes (24.4) but could bag only 53 seats.

BJP's NDA allies -- the Lok Jan Shakti Party and the Hindustani Awam Morcha (Secular) -- could manage only two seats and one seat respectively, polling 4.8 per cent votes and 2.3 per cent votes. They contested 42 seats and 21 seats respectively.

The Rashtriya Lok Samta Party, another BJP ally, contested 23 seats but won only two with a 2.6 per cent vote share.

The JDU with BJP as ally in 2010 Assembly polls bagged 115 out of the 141 seats it contested with a vote share of 38.77 per cent votes. BJP bagged 91 of the 102 seats and its vote share was the highest at 39.56 per cent votes.

The All India Majlis-e-Ittehadul Muslimeen (AIMIM), which contested in six seats mainly in the Muslim-dominated Seemanchal region, drew a blank and managed 0.2 per cent of the total votes polled.

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