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Bihar Vidhan Parishad Power Shift: How the NDA Tightened Its Grip While the Opposition Faces a Reckoning

Bihar ✍️ Amitabh Sinha 🕒 2026-04-06 08:37 🔥 Views: 1
Bihar Vidhan Parishad News

Patna is buzzing – and with good reason. The political temperature around the Bihar Vidhan Parishad has been boiling over for the past few months, but the results of the latest Rajya Sabha biennial elections have just sent a massive shockwave through the opposition ranks. If you were following the drama at the Bihar Legislative Council earlier in the budget session, you’ll know the heat was real. But what happened on March 16th has fundamentally rewritten the rules of engagement.

Let’s cut through the noise. The NDA didn’t just win – they pulled off a clean sweep of all five Rajya Sabha seats. We’re talking about Chief Minister Nitish Kumar making his debut in the Upper House, alongside BJP president Nitin Nabin, Union Minister Ram Nath Thakur, RLM chief Upendra Kushwaha, and BJP’s Shivesh Kumar. For the opposition Mahagathbandhan, this was a nightmare scenario. They claimed they had the numbers – 41 MLAs in their pocket – but when it came time to cast those ballots, four of their own simply vanished into thin air.

The Council Chaos: When Marshals Had to Step In

To understand the scale of this defeat, we need to rewind just a few weeks to the ruckus inside the Bihar Vidhan Parishad. It was mid-February, and the House looked more like a wrestling ring than a legislative chamber. The Leader of the Opposition, Rabri Devi, was demanding an apology from CM Nitish Kumar over remarks he made during a heated exchange about law and order.

The Chairman, Awadhesh Narain Singh, lost his cool. After repeated warnings, he ordered the marshals to physically remove the protesting Members of the Bihar Legislative Council. We saw RJD MLCs like Sunil Singh and even Rabri Devi herself being escorted out. The treasury benches were furious, accusing the opposition of deliberately stalling the budget session. That day, the walls of the Council witnessed a level of hostility we rarely see. It set the stage perfectly for the electoral war that followed.

Numbers Don’t Lie: How the NDA Engineered the Sweep

Coming back to the recent elections, the NDA’s strategic brilliance was on full display. While the Leader of Opposition of Bihar Legislative Council and her party were busy keeping their MLAs holed up in a hotel – trying to stop poaching – the NDA played a quiet, deadly game of mathematics.

Here’s how the numbers broke down in the Rajya Sabha polls:

  • Total Votes Needed to Win a Seat: 41 first-preference votes.
  • NDA Votes in the Assembly: 202 MLAs (well above the required strength).
  • Opposition Votes Present: Only 37 out of a claimed 41 (Three Congress MLAs and one RJD MLA, Faisal Rahman, didn’t show up).
  • The Winning Move: When the fifth seat went to second-preference votes, Shivesh Kumar (NDA) crushed AD Singh (RJD) thanks to superior numbers.

This wasn’t luck. While the opposition was busy shouting slogans inside the Bihar Vidhan Parishad Guest House (where they had confined their flock), the NDA was securing cross-votes and ensuring party discipline. The message is loud and clear: In Bihar right now, the NDA is a fortress, and the opposition is trying to storm it with plastic spoons.

What This Means for Nitish and Tejashwi

For Nitish Kumar, this victory is a farewell gift to the Assembly and a grand welcome to Delhi. By winning a Rajya Sabha seat, he’s now a national player without the daily burden of running the state – though he remains CM for now. It gives him leverage and breathing room.

For Tejashwi Yadav and the RJD, this is a massive credibility crisis. How do you explain three Congress MLAs going “missing” and your own man (Faisal Rahman) skipping the vote? It shows a lack of control. On the streets of Patna, people are already saying that the Bihar Legislative Council will now see fewer roadblocks from an opposition that’s demoralised and fractured.

One thing is certain: the political landscape of the state has tilted decisively. The old guard of the Bihar Vidhan Parishad is now firmly in the NDA’s pocket, and the road to 2027 just got a whole lot steeper for the Grand Alliance.