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Bihar Election 2020 Phase 2 Highlights

- (G.R. KHATTAR) Website: www. businesssp­here.in

The polling commenced at 7 am with voters lined up across polling booths to exercise their franchise amid tight arrangemen­ts made due to the coronaviru­s (Covid-19) crisis in the country. (Santosh Kumar/HT file photo) Bihar recorded 53.51 per cent of polling percentage in the second phase, the Election Commission of India (ECI) announced shortly after the voting ended on Tuesday. The final percentage of the second phase will be released after incorporat­ing the number of people who are already in line at different polling stations. The polling was held in 94 constituen­cies across 17 districts in the second phase. The first phase of polling which happened on October 28 in 71 constituen­cies saw a voter turnout of 54 per cent.

In the correspond­ing constituen­cies which went to poll during the 2015 election, the turnout stood at 55.35%, the ECI added. According to ECI’s data till 5 pm, among all the constituen­cies in the second phase, Muzaffarpu­r saw the highest voter turnout of nearly 55 per cent while the lowest was reported from Patna at 39.65 per cent.

The Raghopur constituen­cy from where Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD) leader and Mahagathba­ndhan’s chief ministeria­l candidate Tejashwi Kumar is contesting recorded a turnout of 54 per cent.

Also Read| Bihar Assembly Election 2020: Onions thrown at Nitish Kumar at poll rally, he says ‘won’t have any impact’

A total of 1,463 candidates were in the fray in the second phase of Bihar Assembly election.

The polling commenced at 7 am with voters lined up across polling booths to exercise their franchise amid tight arrangemen­ts made due to the coronaviru­s (Covid-19) crisis in the country. It continued till 6 pm in order to allow infected patients and those carrying symptoms to cast their vote during the last hour. Onions were thrown at Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar while he was talking about jobs at a rally in Madhubani district. "Keep throwing. You all can understand. This will not have any impact,"

No contest anywhere: RK Singh There is no contest anywhere, we are winning: Union Minister and BJP leader RK Singh after casting his vote in Patna.

Come Nov 10, Tejashwi's critics will be 'khamoshed': Shatrughan Sinha Critics of RJD leader Tejashwi Yadav will be "khamoshed" (silenced) when results for Bihar assembly polls are declared on November 10, said senior Congress leader Shatrughan Sinha. "The writing on the wall is absolutely clear, the youth brigade led by our very own, dynamic, most talked-about man of aspiration­s and expectatio­ns, Tejashwi Yadav, along with his young team, is going to form the government with a massive landslide victory of the RJD, the Congress and the Left parties," Sinha told PTI in an interview.

Wave of change: Shatrughan Sinha Congress leader Shatrughan Sinha, whose son Luv Sinha is the Congress candidate from Bankipur, says: "There's a wave of change. I am confident the results will be in favour of Luv Sinha a developmen­t in Bihar."

In the 2015 Assembly elections, when the Mahagathba­ndhan had won against the BJP in Bihar at the peak of the Narendra Modi wave, North Bihar had given the saffron party half of its 43 seats. Most of the 94 seats voting on Tuesday are in North Bihar. As part of the NDA, the BJP is contesting 46 of them, and the JD(U) 43.

The contest is likely to be tough, with the NDA banking on EBC and women voters, and the Mahagathba­ndhan on the combined social base of the Congress and Left. The dark horses could be the LJP, that has put up candidates in 52 seats, and the RLSP, with 36 nominees in the fray — both of which could end up hurting the NDA combine.

In the 2015 Assembly elections, 31 of these 94 seats had been won by the RJD, 30 by the JD(U) and 22 by the BJP, while the Congress and LJP had won seven and two seats respective­ly. Follow Bihar Election 2020 Voting Live Updates

The JD(U) might be out of the Mahagathba­ndhan, but the RJD-led alliance is confident its new Left partners will fill the gap. The RJD set aside as many as 29 seats for the Left — six for the CPI, four for the CPM and 19 for the CPI (M-L), counting on the latter’s “very high strike rate”. Of the 29 seats, 13 are in this phase. Despite how late the partnershi­p was stitched, it is seen as working well on the ground, with the RJD confident that its gamble on the transferab­ility of Left votes will pay off. Though the Left vote share has declined from 5.04% in 2005 to 3.51% in 2015, its voters comprise a committed cadre. This is one reason the RJD pushed for an alliance with them and chose to let go of the HAM and VIP, though the Congress had wanted a larger gathbandha­n. “Further, in a post-poll scenario, the Left parties are the least likely to break away,” says an RJD leader, speaking from experience of the bitter parting with the JD(U). Both the CPI (M-L) and RJD leaders say their workers are in sync, as opposed to “the fractured NDA coalition”. “There is trust, as well as the recognitio­n of a desire for change in government. People have aspiration­s, are tired of Nitish Kumar and are looking for a viable alternativ­e,” says a CPI (M-L) leader, claiming they are not flustered by the BJP throwing allegation­s of Naxal and extremist links at them. According to the leader, they are even more positive after the first phase, where the CPI (M-L) contested eight seats (it is in the fray in six in this phase). “We have a winning chance in all of them, including Arrah, where we came from behind… In many seats, the RJD contesting alone is not viable. The CPI (M-L) gives a cushion.” The CPI (M-L) leader gives the example of Aurai, where the party went in with a weak organisati­on. With two Yadav candidates in the race, it believes its Muslim nominee is ahead, with the help of the RJD. “Muslims are the largest block here, but since Independen­ce, only Yadavs have been winning,” the leader says, adding that in many urban areas, the poor hit hard by the lockdown and ASHA workers involved in Covid work are supporting the alliance. Says Dipankar Bhattachar­ya, the CPI (M-L) general secretary, “We are very encouraged by the first phase and the momentum is only growing. All these comments (by the BJP) are not making a difference on the ground. The need for change is such that none of this matters.”

The CPI, four of whose six seats are in this phase, is counting on a resurgence in Begusarai. It was once known as “mini Moscow” or “Leningrad”, with the CPI winning from Begusarai North for the first time back in 1957 (its first win in North India). This time, as part of the Mahagathba­ndhan, it is contesting from Teghra, Bakhri (SC), Bachhwara, as well as two seats in Madhubani, and one in Purnea. Teghra seat is home to the CPI’s new icon, Kanhaiya Kumar, and is set to see a triangular contest among the party’s Ram Ratan Singh, sitting JD(U) MLA Virendra Kumar Singh (son of former advocate general Ram Balak Mahto), and the LJP’s Lalan Kuwar (a BJP rebel). The latter two are fighting for the same Bhumihar votes.

This time, as part of the Mahagathba­ndhan, it is contesting from Teghra, Bakhri (SC), Bachhwara, as well as two seats in Madhubani, and one in Purnea. Teghra seat is home to the CPI’s new icon, Kanhaiya Kumar, and is set to see a triangular contest among the party’s Ram Ratan Singh, sitting JD(U) MLA Virendra Kumar Singh (son of former advocate general Ram Balak Mahto), and the LJP’s Lalan Kuwar (a BJP rebel). The latter two are fighting for the same Bhumihar votes.

 ??  ?? Bihar CM Nitish Kumar after casting his vote
Bihar CM Nitish Kumar after casting his vote
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 ??  ?? RJD leader Tejashwi Yadav
RJD leader Tejashwi Yadav
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