Hindustan Times (East UP)

Bihar to vote in crucial 2nd phase of polling today

- Agencies letters@hindustant­imes.com

PATNA: The stage is set for the second and, arguably, the most crucial of the three phases of Bihar assembly elections, with over a third of the 243-strong assembly seats going to polls in on Tuesday.

Over 28.5 million voters will decide the fate of nearly 1,500 candidates in 94 assembly segments across 17 districts, all of which but three -- Patna, Bhagalpur and Nalanda -- are situated north of the Ganga river.

Notable among the candidates is the Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD) chief Tejashwi Yadav, the opposition Grand Alliance’s chief ministeria­l candidate, who has been aggressive­ly trying to cash in on the anti-incumbency factor against the Nitish Kumar government.

The 31-year-old is seeking re-election from Raghopur in Vaishali district which he had wrested back for his party from the Bharatiya Janata Party’s (BJP) Satish Kumar in 2015. The BJP leader had defeated Yadav’s mother Rabri Devi, a former chief minister, in 2010.

The BJP has retained its trust in Satish Kumar, hoping that the giant killer will be able to do a repeat of 2010 when, like this time, Janata Dal (United) president and chief minister Nitish Kumar was with the National

Democratic Alliance (NDA).

Tejashwi Yadav’s elder brother Tej Pratap Yadav is trying his luck from Hasanpur in Samastipur district, shifting his base from Mahua in Vaishali. There were said to be fears in the RJD camp that Tej Pratap’s bid to retain Mahua could be challenged by the NDA through his estranged wife Aishwarya as its trump card.

She is already taking an active part in the campaign for her father Chandrika Roy in Parsa, which he has represente­d a number of times and is seeking to retain on a JD(U) ticket this time.

All the four assembly segments in the capital city – Patna Sahib, Kumhrar, Bankipur and Digha – are also going to polls in the second phase. All these are held by the BJP.

State minister Nand Kishore Yadav is in the fray trying to retain Patna Sahib for a seventh consecutiv­e term. Multiplete­rm MLA Nitin Nabin faces a challenge in Bankipur from Congress candidate Luv Sinha, who is the son of actor-turnedpoli­tician Shatrughan Sinha, a two-time local MP who lost the seat when he entered the fray after quitting the BJP.

The BJP has retained as its candidates Arun Sinha and Sanjiv Chaurasia for Kumhrar and Digha respective­ly. Seven constituen­cies of Nalanda district, to which chief minister Nitish Kumar belongs, also go to polls in the second phase.

The JD(U) has suffered a setback in the reserved Rajgir seat where its sitting MLA Ravi Jyoti, a former police inspector, is now the fray on a Congress ticket. Of the 1,463 candidates in the fray on the 94 seats, nearly 10% (146) are women.

Among the major parties, the RJD is contesting 56 of the 94 seats while its ally Congress is contesting 24. The Communist Party of India (CPI) and the Communist Party of India (Marxist), which joined the Grand Alliance recently, are fighting four seats each. Quite a few seats are being contested by the CPI(ML), the Left outfit with the strongest presence in Bihar.

BJP candidates are in the fray in 46 of the seats, while another 43 are being contested by those with JD(U) tickets. Mukesh Sahni’s VIP, the latest entrant in the NDA, is contesting the remaining five. The LJP is contesting 52 seats, including the two it had won in 2015 contesting as an NDA constituen­t. The party has fielded one transgende­r candidate too in this phase.

According to the Election Commission of India (EC), votes will be cast at a total of 41,362 polling stations.

 ?? PTI ?? Security personnel carry EVMs as they leave for election duty in Muzaffarpu­r on Monday.
PTI Security personnel carry EVMs as they leave for election duty in Muzaffarpu­r on Monday.

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