• Latest
  • All
  • Special
  • Spotlight
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • India
  • Opinion
  • News
  • Politics
  • Economy
  • Sports
  • Latest
  • Health
  • Reality check
  • Nation builder
  • The blitz special
  • Multilateral
  • Perspective
  • Blitz india
  • Globetrotting
  • Latest news
  • Social
  • Rising india
  • A tribute
  • Maharashtra
  • world
  • G20 podium
  • Books
  • States
  • Gender equality
  • Focus uk
  • Eco-focus
  • Entertainment
  • International
  • Legal
  • Econmy/sports
  • Nation
  • world cup
  • Campaign
  • Update
Rigmaroles of Bihar

Rigmaroles of Bihar

November 29, 2025
Team India’s best yet to come Bangar

Team India’s best yet to come: Bangar

February 20, 2026
PLI scheme investments cross Rs 2.16 lakh crore

PLI scheme investments cross Rs 2.16 lakh crore

February 20, 2026
Supreme Court

SC orders judicial officers to oversee SIR in Bengal

February 20, 2026
Sri Lankan President meets PM Modi

Sri Lankan President meets PM Modi

February 20, 2026
Mensik upsets Sinner in Qatar Open

Mensik upsets Sinner in Qatar Open

February 20, 2026
India’s PMI for February strongest in 3 months

India’s PMI for February strongest in 3 months

February 20, 2026
Norway rejects Trump's Board of Peace

Norway rejects Trump’s Board of Peace

February 20, 2026
Union Minister of State Jayant Chaudhary

Chaudhary urges firms to set up AI teams

February 20, 2026
India formally joins Pax Silica Declaration

India formally joins Pax Silica Declaration

February 20, 2026
Harmanpreet most-capped player in women’s cricket hd images

Harmanpreet most-capped player in women’s cricket

February 19, 2026
Former Prince Andrew arrested amid probe into Epstein ties

Former Prince Andrew arrested amid probe into Epstien ties

February 19, 2026
India’s AI opportunity is amazing

India’s AI opportunity is amazing: Altman

February 19, 2026
Blitzindiamedia
  • Blitz Highlights
    • Special
    • Spotlight
    • Insight
    • Education
    • Health
    • Sports
    • Entertainment
  • Opinion
  • Legal
  • Perspective
  • Nation
    • East
    • West
    • North
    • South
  • Business & Economy
  • World
  • Hindi Edition
  • International Editions
    • US (New York)
    • UK (London)
    • Middle East (Dubai)
    • Tanzania (Africa)
  • Blitz India Business
No Result
View All Result
  • Blitz Highlights
    • Special
    • Spotlight
    • Insight
    • Education
    • Health
    • Sports
    • Entertainment
  • Opinion
  • Legal
  • Perspective
  • Nation
    • East
    • West
    • North
    • South
  • Business & Economy
  • World
  • Hindi Edition
  • International Editions
    • US (New York)
    • UK (London)
    • Middle East (Dubai)
    • Tanzania (Africa)
  • Blitz India Business
No Result
View All Result
World's first weekly chronicle of development news
No Result
View All Result

Rigmaroles of Bihar

Voters made decision on parameter of governance

by Blitz India Media
November 29, 2025
in Insight
Rigmaroles of Bihar
Blitz Bureau

NEW DELHI:In the last fifty years Mumbai has reinvented itself, Madras has become the mother lode of a new economy, Bangalore has turned into a traffic jam that no one wants to leave, Hyderabad has gestated into a skyscraper melee, and Delhi has become so fat as to need surgery. Calcutta sits still where it has not deteriorated, saved a little on its fringe by new townships but wrapped in hectic, haphazard, crowded gloom within. The people who live astride the narrow lanes have become jaded.

The last dream of any politician is the search for a place in national memory. Some British leaders, in the age when they could set a trend, realised that a good quip could make you more memorable than a hundred worthwhile decisions. The quip did not have to be restrained by accuracy, but it had to sound intelligent. Benjamin Disraeli, the 19th-century British Prime Minister, once remarked that the most successful man in life is the one who has the best information.

YOU MAY ALSO LIKE

PRAGATI@50

Wants ineffective UN and NATO relic to go

By that measure, Congress would never have swept the elections in Bihar. Congress has become dysfunctional because of institutional collapse. A political party should be structured like a pyramid populated by a chain of functionaries who create a two-lane highway of information that connects the pinnacle to the base. Knowledge of ground reality is supplemented by media and other independent sources. Congress leaders were shocked, instead of being merely surprised, because they had lost touch with their roots in Bihar.

Consistent message

Embitterment is neither a sensible option nor a substitute for policy. The message from Bihar has been consistent. Congress numbers in the Bihar Assembly have declined consistently over the last three decades, from 71 in 1990 to six in 2025. The lowest was four, in 2010. Even the Muslim vote deserted Congress in 2025 where it found an alternative. The hardline All India Majlis-e-Ittehadul Muslimeen (AIMIM) got five seats in Seemanchal, the north-eastern region of the state. The reduced representation of Muslims in the Bihar Assembly is some cause for worry. The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) does not name Muslim candidates because they do not bring the community vote; parties like the Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD) and Congress now take the Muslim vote for granted. This has opened space in Bihar for AIMIM.

There is a parallel message: regional parties are now a decisive component in an electoral victory. This election was a battle between allies as much as principals. RJD got 23 per cent of the vote across 161 constituencies; and BJP 21 per cent from 101. The effective difference lay in the gravitational pull of allies. The Janata Dal (United) matched BJP with 19.25 per cent from 101 seats, but Congress could not deliver more than 8.71 per cent to its senior partner. BJP and JD (U) took out insurance by adding Chirag Paswan to their coalition. This turned victory into a sweep. RJD had the chance of bringing Chirag Paswan into its alliance, but miscalculated.

Local identity

A strong local identity becomes crucial in regional elections. Bihar has, unusually, two regional behemoths; if they find the right ally they rule. RJD has boxed itself into the defeated corner by rejecting options. It will not look beyond Congress. Nitish Kumar is flexible. In the last 10 years he has switched from BJP to RJD and back again. Nor has this hurt his secular credentials. Voters rely on what you do rather than what you say.

In adjoining Bengal, Mamata Banerjee has, so far, proved that she can outflank allies; but perhaps the time has come when she should begin to worry about the revival of the Left Front, which can easily swallow a chunk of her vote, leaving her a few apples short of a picnic. The Marxists have become a Bengali-centric regional party in Bengal, and are showing a few incipient signs of revival. Congress is comatose.

One of the more astonishing facts of the Congress dilemma is that it worships Indira Gandhi from every pulpit, as indeed it has a right to do since her commitment to nationalism was nonpareil, but it refuses to learn from what she did. She became Prime Minister in 1966, at the onset of the first Congress decline. In 1967 Congress scraped out a bare majority in Parliament and lost Assembly elections from Punjab to Bengal. Indira Gandhi presided over the rebirth of Congress in 1969 with an economic programme for the poor and the promise to remove poverty, which won her a spectacular victory in March 1971. Who mentions an economic programme now?

Lesson for everyone

This is what allies are telling Congress. Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK) leader MK Stalin congratulated Nitish Kumar over his victory, lauded RJD leader Tejashwi Yadav’s “tireless campaign”, and reminded Congress that only “welfare-driven credibility, social and ideological coalitions, clear political messaging and dedicated management” win elections. Bihar, he added, was a lesson for everyone. Stalin’s statement has implications, not least because it was drafted with some thought. By recognising the legitimacy of Nitish Kumar’s re-election, he undermined the vote-theft alibi. Bihar voters made their decision on a logical parameter: governance. Nitish Kumar may not have been ideal, but they found the alternative unacceptable. Stalin urged introspection above accusation.

From Maharashtra Supriya Sule got the statistics right but chose to underplay their meaning. If all principal parties retained their vote share, as she pointed out, then there was no anti-incumbency. The first objective of governments in an election is to preserve the winning vote share. It takes a shift of just 2 or 3 per cent to trigger an earthquake.

Electoral magnate

BJP brought Narendra Modi’s vote to its alliance. He has become an electoral magnet; without his leadership, BJP’s vote share would plummet. He gets the votes of the poor because of a sustained social welfare programme that has ensured food security to 800 million Indians and raised the aspirations of the underprivileged. The World Bank has confirmed that poverty in India has been reduced to less than 2 per cent. That is what mattered most in Bihar.

Previous Post

Stubbs’ 94, helps South Africa set India target of 549 runs

Next Post

Taiwan asserts itself

Related Posts

PRAGATI
Insight

PRAGATI@50

February 13, 2026
Wants ineffective UN and NATO relic to go
Insight

Wants ineffective UN and NATO relic to go

February 7, 2026
Trump pledges to cut US prescription drug prices by 80pc
Insight

Trump reinvents the World

February 2, 2026
Greenland
Insight

Greenland is about CHIPS AND WATER

January 23, 2026
The YEAR of the Violent Whirlpool
Insight

The YEAR of the Violent Whirlpool

January 16, 2026
Shivraj-Singh-Chouhan
Insight

VB-G RAM G Act 2025 fixes structural gaps

January 10, 2026

Recent News

Team India’s best yet to come Bangar

Team India’s best yet to come: Bangar

February 20, 2026
PLI scheme investments cross Rs 2.16 lakh crore

PLI scheme investments cross Rs 2.16 lakh crore

February 20, 2026
Supreme Court

SC orders judicial officers to oversee SIR in Bengal

February 20, 2026
Sri Lankan President meets PM Modi

Sri Lankan President meets PM Modi

February 20, 2026
Mensik upsets Sinner in Qatar Open

Mensik upsets Sinner in Qatar Open

February 20, 2026
India’s PMI for February strongest in 3 months

India’s PMI for February strongest in 3 months

February 20, 2026
Norway rejects Trump's Board of Peace

Norway rejects Trump’s Board of Peace

February 20, 2026
Union Minister of State Jayant Chaudhary

Chaudhary urges firms to set up AI teams

February 20, 2026
India formally joins Pax Silica Declaration

India formally joins Pax Silica Declaration

February 20, 2026
Harmanpreet most-capped player in women’s cricket hd images

Harmanpreet most-capped player in women’s cricket

February 19, 2026
Former Prince Andrew arrested amid probe into Epstein ties

Former Prince Andrew arrested amid probe into Epstien ties

February 19, 2026
India’s AI opportunity is amazing

India’s AI opportunity is amazing: Altman

February 19, 2026

Blitz Highlights

  • Special
  • Spotlight
  • Insight
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Sports

International Editions

  • US (New York)
  • UK (London)
  • Middle East (Dubai)
  • Tanzania (Africa)

Nation

  • East
  • West
  • South
  • North
  • Hindi Edition

E-paper

  • India
  • Hindi E-paper
  • Dubai E-Paper
  • USA E-Paper
  • UK-Epaper
  • Tanzania E-paper

Useful Links

  • About us
  • Contact
  • Team
  • Privacy Policy

©2024 Blitz India Media -Building A New Nation

    No Result
    View All Result
    • Blitz Highlights
      • Special
      • Spotlight
      • Insight
      • Education
      • Sports
      • Health
      • Entertainment
    • Opinion
    • Legal
    • Perspective
    • Nation
      • East
      • West
      • North
      • South
    • Business & Economy
    • World
    • Hindi Edition
    • International Editions
      • US (New York)
      • UK (London)
      • Middle East (Dubai)
      • Tanzania (Africa)
    • Download
    • Blitz India Business

    © 2025 Blitz India Media -BlitzIndia Building A New Nation