New rules of the game
THE WEEK|November 22, 2020
Beyond political machinations, the Bihar election results mark a subtle break from the past
PRATUL SHARMA
New rules of the game

A raging pandemic and an economic slowdown had hit the people hard. The loss of livelihood had particularly squeezed the middle class and the poor. And the election was their opportunity to express their opinion.

When the votes were counted on November 10, it was clear that they had largely reposed their faith in the ruling dispensation, not just in Bihar, but also in eight other states where by-polls were held in the 59 assembly seats and one Lok Sabha constituency. The BJP retained its edge over the rivals. Prime Minister Narendra Modi, in particular, saved the day for the National Democratic Alliance in Bihar.

The saffron party, which had suffered several setbacks in states since 2018, has regained some of the lost ground in the assembly polls. It won 41 of these 59 assembly byelections, mostly at the cost of the Congress. The Shivraj Singh Chouhan government in Madhya Pradesh is now in comfortable position (out of 28 seats that went to the polls, the BJP won 19). In Gujarat, the party won all the eight seats. It won six out of seven seats in Uttar Pradesh and five in Manipur. The victory in the Dubbaka

FACE OF THE CAMPAIGN

While Nitish Kumar was the leader of the NDA in Bihar, it was Prime Minister Narendra Modi who pulled in the votes constituency in Telangana has provided the party with a crucial entry into the state.

In Bihar, the BJP emerged as the dominant player, winning 74 seats, 21 more than what it won five years ago. For the first time, it is within striking distance of having its own chief minister in the state. For now, the BJP has said Nitish Kumar would continue as chief minister as it had promised before the elections.

This story is from the November 22, 2020 edition of THE WEEK.

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This story is from the November 22, 2020 edition of THE WEEK.

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