Last Updated:July 03, 2025, 10:24 IST
Cutting across political divide, there is some concern about the impact of Non Resident Bihari voters getting weeded out.

The JDU-BJP combine and the RJD-led Opposition are in campaign mode in poll-bound Bihar. (Image: PTI)
Exactly 15 years ago, similar pictures of then Gujarat chief minister Narendra Modi and Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar had sprung up across Patna. It was on the eve of BJP executive and soon after Gujarat had donated Rs 5 crore to Bihar for flood relief. The giant hoardings and the newspaper ads showing Modi and Nitish hand in hand, smiling, reportedly riled the Bihar CM so much that the alliance was ruptured. Nitish Kumar, as per his aides, saw the ads as an attempt to show Bihar and his governance in poor light.
Much water has flown down the Ganga since then. Nitish has come back to the NDA fold and promised PM Modi from electoral rally stage never to sever ties again. The latest posters at JDU office is further acknowledgement that if BJP needs Nitish as the face of susashan (good governance) to keep away “jungle raj", Nitish needs Modi more to keep an aggressive RJD away.
Opposition is taking pot-shots at JDU, making references to Nitish Kumar’s health. Their charge – BJP will finish JDU as the latter flounders to find a successor for Nitish. The poster is one more weapon in their ‘JDU will be over’ arsenal.
Jungle Raj
The RJD-led opposition is in the campaign mode in poll-bound Bihar. Tejashwi Yadav, the former Deputy CM, believes this election is his. “Banenge, kyun nahi banenge, (I will become CM, why not)" is his reply when media interviewers ask the mandatory “Are we speaking to the next CM" question.
He is on a yatra, press conference, interview giving spree. Taking the jungle raj charge head on, the youngest son of Lalu Prasad asks, “I was Deputy Chief Minister for 18 months — did people stop stepping out of their homes?"
He, instead, keeps the focus on anti-incumbency.
“We’ve been in opposition for the last 20 years, and they’re still crying about us. Why don’t they take accountability for their governance? What’s their plan for trade in Bihar? How will they make small businesses viable? They never talk about that. All they say is that ‘jungle raj’ will return," Tejashwi said.
Electoral roll SIR The X Factor
The Election Commission’s Special Intensive Revision, however, could prove to be the X-factor in the run up to the polls. RJD feels that the exercise is only targeting localities which are known to be their stronghold. But cutting across political divide, there is some concern about the impact of Non Resident Bihari voters getting weeded out.
The EC estimates 10 per cent of those in Bihar voter list, do not live in the state. CEC Gyanesh Kumar says law does not make any special provision for such cases. He says only ordinary residents can vote. If indeed SIR disallows the migrant Bihari from voting, the impact may not be on the vote bank of any one party.
Arunima is Editor (Home Affairs) and covers strategic, security and political affairs. From the Ukraine-Russia War to the India-China stand-off in Ladakh to India-Pak clashes, she has reported from ground zero ...Read More
Arunima is Editor (Home Affairs) and covers strategic, security and political affairs. From the Ukraine-Russia War to the India-China stand-off in Ladakh to India-Pak clashes, she has reported from ground zero ...
Read More
News elections JDU, RJD In Campaign Mode: In Bihar's 'Jungle Raj Vs Susashan' Fight, Electoral Roll Brings X-Factor