...
Skip to content

Bihar Election: Voting ends, results will come on November 10

Bihar Election: Voting ends, results will come on November 10
Bihar Election: Voting ends, results will come on November 10

REPORTED BY

Follow our coverage on Google News

Voting was held for the third and final phase in Bihar on November 7, in which polling was held in 78 seats in 16 districts. It consists mainly of the areas of Seemanchal and Mithilanchal.

With this, the voting of the Bihar elections to be held in three phases was completed. The results will come on 10 November.

The Election Commission says that according to the latest data in the third phase, 55.22 percent voting was done. According to the Election Commission, the final figures will be more than this.

In the first phase elections held on November 28, 55.68 percent and in the second phase on November 3, 55.70 percent voting was done.

According to Chandra Bhushan Kumar of the Election Commission, “56.66 percent polling was done in the 2015 assembly elections, the figure which will come this year will be respectable in the context of covid-19”.

About half of the Muslim population of Bihar lives in the assembly segments of this third phase.

But this phase was also special because in many of the seats here, the competition was not between the two main parties or triangular, but triangular.

In the third phase, Rashtriya Lok Samata Party of Upendra Kushwaha, AIMIM of Asaduddin Owaisi, BSP of Mayawati and Jan Adhikar Party of former MP Pappu Yadav were also in the competition.

In the year 2015, out of these 78 seats, 54 seats were won by Janata Dal United, Rashtriya Janata Dal and Congress alliance. At the same time, BJP, LJP, RLSP and Jeetan Ram Manjhi’s Hindustan Awam Morcha were part of the NDA which won 24 seats. But in this, BJP got the maximum 19 seats.

This time there is no JDU in the grand alliance and LJP did not contest elections with NDA.

For the third phase, BJP fielded 35 candidates and JDU fielded 37 candidates. At the same time, five candidates of Mukesh Sahni’s Developing Insan Party were trying their luck.

At the same time, RJD had fielded 46 seats and Congress 25 seats.

You can connect with Ground Report on FacebookTwitter and Whatsapp, and mail us at GReport2018@gmail.com to send us your suggestions and writeups

Author

Support Ground Report to keep independent environmental journalism alive in India

We do deep on-ground reports on environmental, and related issues from the margins of India, with a particular focus on Madhya Pradesh, to inspire relevant interventions and solutions. 

We believe climate change should be the basis of current discourse, and our stories attempt to reflect the same.

Connect With Us

Send your feedback at greport2018@gmail.com

Newsletter

Subscribe our weekly free newsletter on Substack to get tailored content directly to your inbox.

When you pay, you ensure that we are able to produce on-ground underreported environmental stories and keep them free-to-read for those who can’t pay. In exchange, you get exclusive benefits.

Your support amplifies voices too often overlooked, thank you for being part of the movement.

EXPLORE MORE

LATEST

mORE GROUND REPORTS

Environment stories from the margins