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Bihar election


Nitish is pussy, he is happy as long as the status quo exists. It was Sushil Modi who really started the infrastructure development drive in Bihar and it was Nitish who took all the credit. IF Nitish wasn't such a pussy he would have thought this through and gone in this Bihar election alone which could have gotten him far more seats then he will get now. But he decided to play it safe and join the mahagadbandhan along with Congress and Lalu.
 
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@kaykay

Exact situation of Bihar.

My Grand father with his sons,my father and uncles left our villages in Bihar Sharif and came to Ranchi. Yes the situation was same here too, but here he got employment and slightly better condition of living.We were slightly lucky as Ranchi was/is surrounded by industries so slightly better law and order situation.


Thanks for posting and tagging me.
 
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In fact: The importance (or lack of it) of Asaduddin Owaisi in Bihar
Written by Abantika Ghosh | September 15, 2015 7:53 am
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Asaduddin Owaisi
With 24 seats, the Seemanchal region accounts for less than 10 per cent of the seats in the Bihar Assembly but the political importance of the region can be told from the vehemence with which parties on both sides of the political divide have reacted to the decision of the All India Majlis-e-Ittehadul Muslimeen (AIMIM) to contest from here. Their reaction is also a grudging acknowledgment of the ability of AIMIM chief and Hyderabad MP Asaduddin Owaisi to kick up a divisive storm, which, at its most potent, could end up disrupting the very caste equations that have for long been the backbone of election strategy in Bihar.

Once the religious divide gets firmed up, caste tends to become a secondary consideration and that is what is worrying the “secular forces”.

WATCH VIDEO: Manjhi’s HAM Gets 20 Seats In NDA’s Seat Sharing Arrangement

BJP has mostly been dismissive of Owaisi and his politics though in a rare and candid admission, MoS (independent charge) Commerce and Industries Nirmala Sitharaman recently said at an Idea Exchange session that Owaisi contesting Bihar is good for the BJP because his identity politics would make the BJP’s promise of good governance stand out.

She was essentially saying what her opponents have been saying for long — that Owaisi’s entry benefits the BJP — though their logic is far removed from the BJP’s election war cry of “good governance”. They say that Owaisi will end up splitting the Muslim votes and that’s just what the BJP would want.

Whether or not Owaisi sticks to his style of politics — delivering firebrand speeches like he and his brother, AIMIM legislator Akbaruddin Owaisi, do in public meetings in the party stronghold of Hyderabad — his entry will certainly put pressure on the mahagathbandhan or the Grand Alliance of JD(U), RJD and Congress. (Akbaruddin, the younger of the Owaisi brothers has in the past been arrested for his hate speech. Soon after the NDA victory last year, Owaisi had slammed Prime Minister Narendra Modi for his “anti-Muslim” sentiments.)

The criticism of AIMIM helping the BJP is something the party has faced several times before. In fact, at several forums, Owaisi himself has answered questions about his entry being beneficial for the BJP.

On the AIMIM website, the post announcing the party’s Bihar plans is headlined: “In Asaduddin Owaisi’s Bihar War Cry, A Worry For Anti-BJP Alliance…!!!” It goes on to say: “This could turn out to be a spoiler for the anti-BJP ‘Grand Alliance’, comprising the JD(U), RJD and Congress, for whom the Muslim vote forms a critical part of their support base. Lalu Prasad’s Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD), for instance, rode to power thrice on the consolidation of what was referred to as the ‘M-Y Factor’.”

That Owaisi is bad news for Lalu is an axiom. For the former Bihar chief minister whose rustic one-liners are as much a crowd-puller as his caste calculations, this is a make or break election — one last attempt to remain relevant in Bihar politics or risk fading into oblivion. With his political clout dependent on a Muslim-Yadav consolidation, an electoral incursion from far off Hyderabad, almost out of nowhere, is threatening to upset the Muslim applecart that the Grand Alliance had hoped to ride on.

As per the religion data of Census 2011, this is how the Muslim population in Seemanchal stacks up — Araria has 42.95% Muslims, Purnea has 38.46%, Katihar has 44.47% and Kishanganj, the only district in the area which shares an international boundary with Bangladesh, 67.98% Muslims. The 24 Assembly seats that the four districts together account for include Katihar, Barari, Pranpur, Manihari, Kishanganj, Bahadurganj, Kochadhaman, Araria, Forbesganj, Raniganj, Purnea and Kasba. Had Owaisi not been in the picture — and even with SP and NCP walking out the alliance – the mahagathbandhan had been cautiously hopeful of making some gains in the region. That is not a certainty any more and even if AIMIM’s own kitty remains small, or even empty — in Maharashtra last year, it won two seats — its effect on Bihar elections will be disproportionate to its organisation on the ground.

It will not be easy for Owaisi, though. In fact, it is believed that one of the reasons he took so long to announce his Bihar outing is his concerns about whether he would be able to straddle differences in culture and language. But now that he is in, the Grand Alliance will have to watch out.

Ironically, the AIMIM campaign in the state will be spearheaded by a man who had once withdrawn from the poll fray, saying he didn’t want to cause a division of Muslim votes. Days before the 2014 Lok Sabha polls, then JD(U) candidate Akhtarul Iman had withdrawn his candidature from the Kishanganj Lok Sabha seat in favour of Congress candidate Asrarul Haque, saying that the need of the hour was to defeat the BJP and division of “secular” votes would not serve that purpose.

Haque won the election, one of only two Congress MPs from Bihar. As president of the AIMIM’s Bihar unit, will Iman preside over a whole organisation that will end up helping the BJP?

- See more at: In fact: The importance (or lack of it) of Asaduddin Owaisi in Bihar | The Indian Express
 
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Bihar polls attract interest of the world; may decide course of economic reforms
By Dipanjan Roy Chaudhury, ET Bureau | 16 Sep, 2015, 06.13AM IST
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NEW DELHI: No Assembly election in India since Narendra Modi came to power last May has seen such interest from foreign missions here as the forthcoming Bihar polls. The US, UK, Canada, Germany, France, Japan, China, Australia and Singapore are keenly following the developments in the run up to the October-November elections, which may decide the course of economic reforms and investments in India in the next few years.

Maharashtra, Haryana and Jharkhand went to polls after last year's parliamentary elections. But those elections did not attract any special attention. After its failure to push key policies through Parliament as the ruling coalition is a minority in the Rajya Sabha, the government has slowed down a bit on reforms with the Bihar elections also approaching. A victory in the eastern state will give Modi and the BJP more firepower to take on the Opposition and carry on with reforms. Therefore countries that have key economic stakes in this country are keen on the outcome of the polls, sources in various diplomatic missions told ET. Some diplomatic missions may even plan field trips to Bihar in the next few weeks to understand the ground situation, sources indicated.

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Bihar polls attract interest of the world; may decide course of economic reforms - The Economic Times

@45'22' @ranjeet @saurav

check this bhiayo for more deatils
 
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#JunglerajEpisode1 trending no1 in India on Twitter presently.

Lots of pol khol of Lalu and Nitish.
 
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lol 51% vote share, 41% from Muslims alone and only 140 seats ? if these vote share figures are true then its 240/243 seats for BJP.... :lol:

Hahaha Lolz

As expected, BJP stooges Zee news showed their true colours :lol:

BTW India Tv/ ZEE News and TV18 are always pro-BJP(variety of reasons.... management, owners, history... etc).

At the other extreme, the Anandabazar patrika owned ABP have suddenly gone anti-BJP since early this year.:lol:

In all probability, as all along I have been posting, NDA voteshare is increasing. Infact, if voting was to be done today, NDA will get majority :)

In actual elections after one month, BJP is surely getting around 120 (may just miss majority on its own). Its allies, especially HAM has sitting MLAs and they will surely bring in atleast 30 more seats (10 HAM, 10 RLSP, min 10/ max. 15 LJP).

I was in Rajgir/ Jharkhand borders, villages after villages are turning away from JDU (traditionally JDU stronghold) as the grass root level campaigning is taken over by RJD goons.

Throw in districts and areas which are allotted to Congress, and many Yadavs/ Kurmis are openly saying they will vote for NDA as they don't want to waste their votes by voting Pappu.

From now till the last phase, if everything stays as it is, Only thing that can happen other than the above is, if Congress gets ZERO or a paltry 2-3 seats.

Amnd yes, as I said back in June-July itself, MIM is all set to fight atleast 25-30 seats. So BJP will get around 8-10 bonus seats .

PS: @Star Wars sorry was busy last few days so couldn't reply on the political thread.
 
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Meanwhile SP alliance

SP alliance: NCP -40,SP - 85,Jan adhikar party (Pappu yadav) - 64,Samarth samaj party-28,NPP-3,Samajwadi janta party-23

I think that the SP alliance will surely do damage to the LALU Nitish Alliance, it may be very small but damage will be done which might play a big role when other factors are taken into consideration.
 
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I think that the SP alliance will surely do damage to the LALU Nitish Alliance, it may be very small but damage will be done which might play a big role when other factors are taken into consideration.

NCP chief ministerial candidate is Tariq Anwar, he has a considerable support base among Muslims from what i hear...
 
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NCP chief ministerial candidate is Tariq Anwar, he has a considerable support base among Muslims from what i hear...
His following base is limited to Seemanchal though same as Pappu Yadavs Yadava base in same region. Now count Owasi to inflict some damage is Seemanchal too. All in all, Ironically BJP is started looking favourite in its weakest region in terms of votes, thanks to unexpected allies. lolwa

NCP chief ministerial candidate is Tariq Anwar, he has a considerable support base among Muslims from what i hear...
His following base is limited to Seemanchal though same as Pappu Yadavs Yadava base in same region. Now count Owasi to inflict some damage is Seemanchal too. All in all, Ironically BJP is started looking favourite in its weakest region in terms of votes, thanks to unexpected allies. lolwa
 
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First Phase Bihar voters for a Change

A thirst for change, the fear that Lalu Yadav's return will push Bihar to the bad old days of "jungle raj" and the realisation that electing a government opposed to the Centre may result in a Delhi-like impasse are driving a large section of voters voting in the first phase of the Assembly elections, to look beyond Chief Minister Nitish Kumar. The Sunday Guardian visited several constituencies in Begusarai and Samastipur districts that will go to the polls in the first phase on 12 October, to discover a general appreciation for Kumar as an

administrator, especially in areas such as roads and law and order. But at the same time there was immense apprehension that his alliance with Lalu Prasad Yadav would doom the state for good. Shambhu Prasad of Morwa in Samastipur district voiced this fear when he said, "Nitish-babu has done good work. But we want that process to continue, which will not be possible in the company of Lalu Yadav. Therefore, it is necessary to vote for the BJP-led alliance. Humko unse koi problem nahi hai, lekin wo Lalu Yadav ki god mein ja ke baith gaye hain (he is now sitting in Lalu's lap)."

There is also a strong feeling that Nitish Kumar and Lalu Yadav have got 25 years between the two of them to rule Bihar and it is time to give the BJP a chance. "Is baar Bihar mein Modi sarkar aana chahiye," was the common refrain in this belt. Some people also pointed out that since the Centre was ruled by the Bharatiya Janata Party, there is a need to vote for a "similar combination" in Bihar to facilitate development work, as otherwise there may arise a situation like Delhi where the state government is wasting its energy fighting the Centre.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi is a major draw for voters in this region. They think that he is doing a good job. The fact that the BJP has not declared its chief ministerial candidate held little significance for the voters, most of whom said whoever the candidate was would be under the control of Narendra Modi and that's all that mattered. However, there are Modi critics too. "He promised many things, but has not fulfilled them. Check the prices of onion and pulses. He also promised to deposit Rs 15 lakh in our bank accounts. Where is the money? Nitish Kumar has done a lot and we will again vote for the Mahagathbandhan (grand alliance of Nitish, Lalu and Congress)," said Ramchandra Yadav, a farmer at Samastipur.

Nitish Kumar's "Modi has insulted Bihar's DNA" campaign is a complete non-issue in this belt.

The forward castes and the Extremely Backward Castes (EBCs), in particular, are extremely apprehensive of Lalu Yadav returning to the centre stage of Bihar politics. The chorus is that voting for Nitish will mean voting for Lalu.

"We voted for Nitish Kumar to end Lalu's jungle raj and he succeeded in putting an end to it, but this time he joined hands with him. Lalu Yadav will push the state back to those days of anarchy and lawlessness when he was ruling," said Mangal, who runs a dhaba at Bachwara in Begusarai district.

But Nitish Kumar's JDU is putting up a brave front. "We have a solid voter support of Yadavs, Muslim and OBCs. You should not forget the fact that the JDU, RJD and Congress together got 44% votes in the last Lok Sabha elections, whereas the BJP alliance got only 39%. At the time, we contested separately and lost. This time we are together. The caste arithmetic is in our favour and we have a charismatic leader like Nitish Kumar," said Ranbir Nandan, a Member of the Legislative Council with the JDU.

RJD leader Ramchandra Purve asserted, "There was no jungle raj in Bihar. It's all BJP's dushprachar (propaganda). Under Lalu Yadav's rule, people from the weaker sections got their voice. They started talking about their rights. Therefore, those opposed to these people started terming the rule as jungle raj. We will ensure inclusive development if we come to power."

State BJP vice president Sanjay Mayukh said that caste equations were being demolished in Bihar, as was evident during the 2014 Lok Sabha elections: "They are living the past. The state has moved away from caste politics. Had it not been so, casteist forces would not have been defeated so badly in the LS elections. The BJP, under Narendra Modi, has set development as its agenda. The people of Bihar know that development under Nitish-Lalu is not possible and therefore will vote for us."

However, a political observer pointed out that the BJP too was quite adept at playing the caste card. "If the JDU-RJD-Congress alliance has the arithmetic, the NDA has the chemistry. The NDA has Narendra Modi who has developed a good chemistry with the people. Just wait for a few more of his rallies and there will be a vast difference. The BJP may not have fulfilled all its promises made last year, but it has established itself as a party which is pro-development. It will consolidate the lead it has got in the last few days and the NDA will win by a good margin," he said.

According to Sanjay Mayukh, the BJP, in the last few years, has expanded its social base to counter the social engineering of Nitish and Lalu. "Besides the upper case votes, we now have a good chunk of votes from OBCs and Dalits. The alliance with Ram Vilas Paswan (a Dalit), Jitan Ram Manjhi (a Mahadalit) and Upendra Kushwaha has helped us in expanding our social base. Moreover, we have also made a dent in the Yadav votes by giving tickets to a large number of Yadav candidates. The party has also given prominence to EBC leaders such as Prem Kumar, Renu Devi and Rambadan Rai," he said.

Source :- First phase Bihar voters thirsting for change
 
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Bihar politics is like Game of Thrones. There are no ideologies, no principles and certainly no ethics. Its pure politics, unadulterated and unsparing to the weak.

Everyone fights for that one ultimate thing, capturing the King’s landing (Chief Minister’s Office) and sitting on the Iron Throne.

Let me make it more clear to you. Just like Game of Thrones, there are multiple political houses (caste combinations) in Bihar and no one owes any loyalty to anyone.

Mahagathbandhan (The Great Alliance)

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Just like King Robert, he never cared about his Kingdom and the kingdom was reeling under corruption and injustice while he enjoyed his time on the Iron Throne. And now with his conviction in the fodder scam, he has been left incapacitated to rule, and hopes that his children will take carry forward his legacy, good or bad.

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Meet the Cersei Lannister of Bihar politics. Nitish Kumar of the House Janata Dal United is the first of His Name, King of the Republic of Bihar and Protector of the Realm. Nitish Kumar became the Chief Minister of Bihar after Lalu’s rule( or misrule). He is the most smart, conniving, and shrewd politician in the Kingdom and has no hesitation in allying with the left, right or the center to keep his Iron Throne intact.

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And now this guy. Sonia Gandhi is trying to teach him the skills of the Game, but the fact is she herself doesn’t know anything. Her kingdom is shrinking day by day and Rahul Gandhi like Robin Arryn is heavily dependent on her mother and is new to the game. Desperately wants to rule, but is too immature for it.

National Democratic Alliance

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Narendra Modi is the Lord Commander of the Bhartiya Janata Party and the Lok Janashakti Party and the RLSP, Prime Minister of the Great Country of India, Breaker of Stereotypes, and the Hope of Millions. Henow plans tocapture theKing’s Landing. He started alone, started winning and making allies. Just like our Khaleesi.

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His most trusted ally in Bihar is Sushil Modi, just like Missandei. Sushil Modi owes complete loyalty to him and is his local counsel. He understands the local politics well and reports everything to him. High chances that if Narendra Modi wins, he will rule the kingdom on his behalf and Narendra Modi will march ahead to win other kingdoms like Assam and Uttar Pradesh.

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No one else deserves to be Tyrion Lannister of Bihar politics. Ram Vilas Paswan, he was initially with the Lannisters and the Baratheons but now sensing the change of winds has joined Team Targaryen or the Team BJP and is now a major Advisor and has got a key position on the Narendra Modi’s Council . He has taken a solemn oath that whosoever forms the Government, he shall keep on taking oaths.
 
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