2004 Indian general election in Bihar

In Bihar the RJD leader Laloo Prasad Yadav, husband of the Bihar Chief Minister Rabri Devi, was able to assemble a broad coalition of anti-NDA parties. It included RJD, Congress, Lok Janshakti, NCP and CPI(M). Congress was sceptical of the coalition, since the party was only allotted four seats by Laloo. The other coalition partners argued that four seats actually reflected the decreasing strength of Congress in the state. Lok Janshakti, a party with strong support amongst Dalit communities, were allotted eight seats. NCP and CPI(M) were allotted one seat each. RJD itself contested 26 seats.

Indian general election in Bihar, 2004

April–May 2004

40 seats
Turnout58.02%
  First party Second party
 
Party UPA NDA

Two large non-NDA parties in the state, CPI and CPI(ML) Liberation, did not join the Laloo-led front but contested individually. CPI(ML)L contested 21 seats and CPI six.

The NDA front consisted of BJP and JD(U). The alliance was threatened at several points, over disagreements on seat-sharing formulas. In the end JD(U) contested 24 seats and BJP 16.

BSP contested all 40 seats and SP 32 on their own, unsuccessfully. Lok Janshakti held sway over Dalit votes and RJD over Yadav votes, thus making it impossible for the Uttar Pradesh-based caste parties to make a breakthrough in the state.

The result was an overwhelming victory for the Laloo-led coalition. It won 29 seats. The rest went to the BJP-JD(U) combine.

Voting in the state was confronted with many irregularities, and repolling was ordered in four constituencies.

Voting and results

Results by Party

Party Seats Voteshare
Contested Won +/- % +/-
Rashtriya Janata Dal 22 Increase16 30.67
Lok Janshakti Party 4 Increase4 8.19
Indian National Congress 3 Increase1 4.49
Janata Dal (United) 6 Decrease12 22.36
Bharatiya Janata Party 5 Decrease7 14.57
Total 40

Note: In 1999, before Jharkhand was created as a separate state, Bihar had 54 constituencies.

Results by constituency

# Constituency Winner
Name Party
1 Bagaha (SC) Kailash Baitha JDU
2 Bettiah Raghunath Jha RJD
3 Motihari Akhilesh Prasad Singh RJD
4 Gopalganj Sadhu Yadav RJD
5 Siwan Shahabuddin RJD
6 Maharajganj Prabhunath Singh JDU
7 Chapra Lalu Prasad Yadav RJD
8 Hajipur (SC) Ram Vilas Paswan LJP
9 Vaishali Raghuvansh Prasad Singh RJD
10 Muzaffarpur George Fernandes JDU
11 Sitamarhi Sitaram Yadav RJD
12 Sheohar Sitaram Singh RJD
13 Madhubani Shakeel Ahmad INC
14 Jhanjharpur Devendra Prasad Yadav RJD
15 Darbhanga Ali Ashraf Fatmi RJD
16 Rosera (SC) Ram Chandra Paswan LJP
17 Samastipur Alok Kumar Mehta RJD
18 Barh Vijay Krishna RJD
19 Balia Surajbhan Singh LJP
20 Saharsa Ranjeet Ranjan LJP
21 Madhepura Lalu Prasad Yadav RJD
22 Araria (SC) Sukdeo Paswan BJP
23 Kishanganj Taslimuddin RJD
24 Purnia Uday Singh BJP
25 Katihar Nikhil Kumar Choudhary BJP
26 Banka Giridhari Yadav RJD
27 Bhagalpur Sushil Modi BJP
28 Khagaria Rabindra Kumar Rana RJD
29 Munger Jay Prakash Narayan Yadav RJD
30 Begusarai Lalan Singh JDU
31 Nalanda Nitish Kumar JDU
32 Patna Ram Kripal Yadav RJD
33 Arrah Kanti Singh RJD
34 Buxar Lalmuni Chaubey BJP
35 Sasaram (SC) Meira Kumar INC
36 Bikramganj Ajit Kumar Singh JDU
37 Aurangabad Nikhil Kumar INC
38 Jahanabad Ganesh Yadav RJD
39 Nawada (SC) Virchandra Paswan RJD
40 Gaya (SC) Rajesh Manjhi RJD
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.