Context:
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The National Democratic Alliance (NDA), led by Nitish Kumar, has scripted a significant electoral comeback in Bihar, defying strong anti-incumbency sentiments and a consolidated opposition alliance.
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The verdict reflects a complex mix of governance credibility, welfare delivery, social coalition building, and leadership perception.
Key Highlights:
Electoral Outcome & Leadership Factor
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Nitish Kumar returned to power despite long tenure fatigue, underscoring sustained voter trust.
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Set to join the rare group of Chief Ministers with over two decades in office.
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Voters perceived Nitish as the most stable and experienced administrator amid political uncertainty.
Women-Centric Welfare as a Decisive Factor
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Significant surge in women voter turnout, emerging as the backbone of NDA support.
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Key initiatives:
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₹10,000 per month for three months transferred to 1.2 crore women newly inducted into Self-Help Groups (SHGs)
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Interest-free loans, skill training, livelihood schemes, and cash transfers
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Promise to scale up women-led enterprises from 4 lakh to 10 lakh enhanced electoral traction.
Caste Dynamics & Social Engineering
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RJD’s MY (Muslim–Yadav) base remained intact, but:
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EBCs (Extremely Backward Classes) and non-Yadav OBCs fragmented and shifted towards NDA
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BJP–JD(U) alliance made strong inroads through:
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Targeted welfare schemes
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Community-specific outreach
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Long-term EBC-focused governance
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Governance Memory & Development Narrative
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Public recall of governance improvements since 2005:
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Road infrastructure
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Improved law and order
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Expanded electricity access
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Fear of a return to “jungle raj” under RJD reinforced preference for continuity.
Alliance Arithmetic & Narrative Advantage
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NDA successfully framed the contest as:
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Development and stability vs. instability and uncertainty
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Opposition unity failed to present a credible alternative leadership.
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RJD’s attempt to revive Nitish’s image of frequent alliance shifts (“palti maarna”) did not outweigh governance credentials.
Relevant Prelims Points:
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Issue: Overcoming anti-incumbency in a long-governed state.
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Key Factors:
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Targeted welfare delivery
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Leadership credibility
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Social coalition restructuring
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Concepts:
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Anti-incumbency: Voter fatigue against incumbents
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Targeted Welfare Delivery: Beneficiary-oriented schemes creating durable support
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Impact:
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Reinforces importance of governance performance in electoral politics
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Relevant Mains Points:
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Polity & Governance Dimensions:
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Demonstrates how performance legitimacy can neutralize anti-incumbency
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Welfare-based governance as a tool for inclusive political mobilisation
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Social & Political Analysis:
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Shift from identity-only politics to welfare-plus-identity strategies
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Women voters as emerging decisive political stakeholders
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Conceptual Clarity:
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Social Coalition Building: Mobilising multiple caste and class groups through governance outcomes
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Targeted Welfare: Measurable socio-economic benefits translating into political trust
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Way Forward:
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Institutionalise welfare delivery with transparency
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Strengthen women-led economic initiatives
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Balance political stability with democratic accountability
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UPSC Relevance (GS-wise):
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GS 2: Polity, Governance, Electoral Politics
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Prelims: Anti-incumbency, Welfare Schemes, Social Coalition Building
