Bihar gets swept away by Modi tsunami; NDA grabs all but one of state\'s 40 seats

Bihar gets swept away by Modi tsunami; NDA grabs all but one of state's 40 seats

Press Trust of India  |  Patna 

got swept away by the "Modi tsunami" as the made a clean sweep in the seats contested by it in the state while allies JD(U) and LJP, headed by Chief and Ram Vilas Paswan, too rode the tide and came out with stellar performances.

The LJP struck gold, winning all the six seats it had contested, maintaining its tally of five years ago and improving on its strike rate compared with that of 2014 when it had fielded candidates in seven seats.

Return to the NDA also helped the JD(U), which had contested separately from the coalition in 2014, boost its tally from a dismal two seats five years ago.

The Congress, which had fought nine, lost all but managed to retain Kishanganj, which was won by late in 2014 and where defeated JD(U) by a margin of under 35,000 votes. It was the worst-ever performance by the in the state in decades.

The party's lone sitting lost Supaul to JD(U)'s Dileshwar Kamati by a margin of 2.66 lakh votes. Tariq Anwar, who quit the NCP and returned to the party last year, lost Katihar to JD(U)'s Dulal Chand Goswami by over 55,000 votes. Former who had lost Sasaram to BJP's Chhedi Paswan five years ago, failed to wrest it back from the sitting who defeated her by 1.65 lakh votes.

The biggest setback, however, came for the seemingly formidable RJD - which led the opposition 'Mahagathbandhan' in the state, had ruled for several years and at present has the largest number of legislators in the Vidhan Sabha.

The party fought 19 seats but scored a nought - for the first time since it was founded by the then Chief in 1997. Prasad's daughter failed to win in her second consecutive attempt as she lost to BJP's - a former of her father and now a Union - by about 40,000 votes.

The RJD had given up its claim on Arrah in exchange for the CPI(ML)'s reciprocation in hoping that it would buttress Bharti's prospects.

Prasad himself had failed to win the seat in 2009 when he lost to another former who was fielded by the JD(U).

Party Chandrika Rai, to whose daughter Prasad's elder son is married, also failed to wrest back the RJD supremo's pocket borough Saran from sitting MP to whom he lost by a comprehensive margin of 1.38 lakh votes.

made a spectacular debut from Patna Sahib which he wrested from two-term MP Shatrughan Sinha, who quit the BJP and joined the recently, defeating the immensely popular by about 2.85 lakh votes.

Giriraj Singh, who has courted controversies many a time by his hardline stance on Hindutva, ended up winning by one of the biggest margins in the state as he defeated CPI's Kanhaiya Kumar, in Begusarai, by 4.22 lakh votes.

The highest margin was recorded by BJP debutant in Madhubani, who retained the seat held by his father beating - fielded by fledgling Mahagathbandhan constituent VIP - by a staggering 4.55 lakh votes.

and ministers of state RK Singh and also retained Purvi Champaran, Arrah and Buxar respectively for the BJP by comfortable margins.

Ram Vilas Paswan's pocket borough Hajipur was retained for LJP by his younger brother - a minister in the government - who trounced his nearest rival by over two lakh votes.

The has announced that he would now seek entry into the Parliament through the Rajya Sabha. His son and heir apparent Chirag Paswan retained Jamui defeating RLSP's Bhudev Chaudhary by 2.41 lakh votes.

Upendra Kushwaha, who himself contested two out of the five seats allocated to his party in the Mahagathbandhan, lost his sitting seat of Karakat as well as Ujiyarpur. Karakat was wrested back by JD(U)'s Mahabali Singh, the winner of 2009. Ujiyarpur was retained by state Nityanand Rai, who won by 2.77 lakh votes.

Sharad Yadav, who had lost his pocket borough to RJD's in 2014 when he fought as a JD(U) candidate, this time entered the fray as a candidate of and ended up losing by over three lakh votes to of the JD(U), who is a minister in the

Pappu Yadav, who fought on the ticket of his own outfit Jan Adhikar Party, ended up losing his deposit as he polled less than one lakh votes in a constituency where the total number of valid votes was in excess of 11 lakhs.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, May 24 2019. 01:45 IST