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Politics of Bihar

The politics of Bihar, an eastern state of India, is dominated by regional political parties. As of 2021, the main political groups are Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD), Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), Janata Dal (United) (JDU), Indian National Congress (INC), Left Front, Lok Janshakti Party (LJP), Hindustani Awam Morcha (HAM). There are also some smaller regional parties, including Samata Party,[1] Hindustani Awam Morcha, Rashtriya Jan Jan Party, Rashtriya Lok Janata Dal, Jan Adhikar Party and Vikassheel Insaan Party, Lok Janshakti Party (Ram Vilas) and Rashtriya Lok Janshakti Party, which play a vital role in politics of state. As of 2024, Bihar is currently ruled by NDA, after JDU break out from Mahagatbandhan (Grandalliance) coalition and returned to NDA fold.[2]

Administration and governments edit

 
Vidhansabha Building, Patna

The constitutional head of the Government of Bihar is the Governor, who is appointed by the President of India. Executive power rests with the Chief Minister and the cabinet. The political party or the coalition of parties that has a majority in the Legislative Assembly forms the government. The first Chief Minister of Bihar was Krishna Sinha and the first Deputy Chief Minister was Anugrah Narayan Sinha.[3]

In 2014, the incumbent Chief Minister Nitish Kumar succeeded Jitan Ram Manjhi, who was sacked from his office.[4] In his previous term, Kumar resigned after the general election in 2014, after which Manjhi took over.

The head of the state bureaucracy is the Chief Secretary. Under him is a hierarchy of officials drawn from the Indian Administrative Service, Indian Police Service, and other wings of the state civil services. The judiciary is headed by the Chief Justice. Bihar has a High Court that has been functioning since 1916. All of the government headquarters are situated in the state capital Patna.

For administrative purposes, Bihar state has nine divisions—Patna, Tirhut, Saran, Darbhanga, Kosi, Purnia, Bhagalpur, Munger, and Magadh Division—which between them are subdivided into thirty-eight districts.[3]

History edit

1937 to 1977 edit

The politics of Bihar is largely driven by caste consciousness, and this holds true for the pre-independence period as well, when first Indian National Congress government was about to be formed in the state in 1937. At that time, in Bihar Provincial Congress Party, there were two caste factions, which were led respectively by Sri Krishna Sinha and Anugrah Narayan Sinha. While, Sri Krishna Sinha represented the Bhumihars, Anugrah Narayan Sinha represented the Rajput caste. These two factions were contesting for the power within Congress in 1937 elections, but, Anugrah Narayan Sinha didn't contest election, and the way for rise of Sri Krishna Sinha to the post of premier of the state was made smooth. Sri Krishna Sinha hence became the first head of state and he served as Chief Minister, till his death in 1961. Anugrah Narayan Sinha died in 1957.[5]

After death of both these leaders, new caste factions were formed in Congress. While one of these faction was led by Binodanand Jha and Mahesh Prasad Sinha, another faction was led by Krishna Ballabh Sahay. There was tussle between Binodanand Jha and Mahesh Prasad Sinha now for power; Jha represented Brahmins, and Sinha represented Bhumihars. However, Binodanand Jha was able to defeat Mahesh Prasad Sinha in race to premiership, as he was able to form a coalition of Rajputs, Brahmins and Kayasthas, which was also supported by Scheduled Castes and Muslims. Consequently, Jha was appointed as new Chief Minister. However, after becoming Chief Minister, during one cabinet rearrangement, he didn't include Krishna Ballabh Sahay, who had supported him earlier. Rather, Jha gave primacy to Satyendra Narayan Sinha, son of Anugrah Narayan Sinha. This event led to defection of Sahay towards the faction led by Mahesh Prasad Sinha.[6]

As per one opinion, Sahay locked horns with Satyendra Narayan Sinha over his plan to give more representation to numerically preponderant Backward Castes like Ahir, Kurmi and Koeri in government and administration. Binodanand Jha had restored the Zamindari Rights of Tatas in Jamshedpur in his tenure and when Jha resigned following the Kamraj Plan (It was a scheme formulated by Congress leader K. Kamraj that old leadership should leave their position and give way to young leaders in Congress' organisational structure), in order to consolidate his power, Sahay after taking over the leadership of Bihar Congress in 1963, wanted to create a coalition of the numerically strong Backward Castes. He recommended a number of times that these Backward Castes were underrepresented in politics and they should be given more positions and representation, however, Satyendra Narayan Sinha took it as a challenge to the privileges enjoyed by the elite caste groups. Sahay had the support of Ram Lakhan Singh Yadav, a Backward Caste leader in his bid. Consequently, S.N Sinha and Sahay were divided into rival political camps.[7]

Post Independence : 1950–1975 edit

 
First Chief Minister of Bihar, Dr. Srikrishna Singh

The first Bihar governments in 1946 were led by Shri Krishna Sinha and Anugrah Narayan Sinha.[3] After the independence of India, power was shared by these Gandhian nationalists: Krishna Sinha became the first Chief Minister and Anugrah Narayan Sinha served as the first Deputy Chief Minister cum Finance Minister. The death of the central railway minister Lalit Narayan Mishra in a hand grenade attack in late 1960s brought an end to indigenous, work-oriented mass leaders. The Indian National Congress (INC) controlled the state for next two decades; at this time, prominent leader Satyendra Narayan Singh left the INC following ideological differences and joined the Janata Party.[3]

Bihar movement and aftermath: 1975–1990 edit

 
The architect of "Total Revolution" Jayprakash Narayan with Jawaharlal Nehru

After independence also, when India was falling into an autocratic rule during the Indira Gandhi regime, the main thrust to the movement to hold elections came from Bihar under the leadership of Jayaprakash Narayan.

In 1974, Narayan led the student's movement in Bihar, which gradually developed into the popular Bihar Movement, during which JP called for a peaceful "Total Revolution". He and V. M. Tarkunde founded the Citizens for Democracy in 1974 and the People's Union for Civil Liberties in 1976 to uphold and defend civil liberties. On 23 January 1977, Indira Gandhi called fresh elections for the following March and released all political prisoners. The Indian Emergency imposed by Indira Gandhi officially ended on 23 March 1977.

In the election, the INC was defeated by the Janata Party, a coalition of several small parties created in 1977. The alliance was headed by Morarji Desai, who became the first non-INC Prime Minister of India.[8][9] The Janata Party won all the fifty-four Lok Sabha seats in Bihar, taking power in the state assembly. Karpoori Thakur became the Chief Minister after winning a contest from the then-Janata Party President Satyendra Narayan Sinha.

The Communist Party in Bihar was founded in 1939. From the 1960s to the 1980s, the Communist movement in the state was led by veteran communist leaders Jagannath Sarkar, Sunil Mukherjee, Rahul Sankrityayan, Pandit Karyanand Sharma, Indradeep Sinha, and Chandrashekhar Singh. Under the leadership of Sarkar, the Communist party fought the "total revolution" led by Jayprakash Narayan as the movement was anti-democratic and challenged the fabric of Indian democracy.[10]

The Bihar Movement campaign warned Indians that the elections might be their last chance to choose between "democracy and dictatorship". As a consequence of the movement, the identity of Bihar (from the word Vihar, meaning monasteries), representing a glorious past, was lost. Its voice often used to get lost in the din of regional clamour of other states, specially the linguistic states like Uttar Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh. Bihar also gained an anti-establishment image. The pro-establishment press often projected the state as undisciplined and anarchic.[11]

Because the regional identity was slowly being sidelined, it was replaced by caste-based politics; power was initially in the hands of the Brahmins, Bhumihars and Rajputs. In the 1980s there was a change in the political scenario of Bihar: riding upon a popular movement of "social justice" and no vote without representation, the middle OBC castes like Yadav, Kurmi, and Koeri replaced upper castes in politics.[12]

 
Statute of Jagdeo Prasad at the Bir Chand Patel Path, Patna. Prasad was the progenitor of Backward caste politics in 1970s.

S.N. Singh's regime was known for deteriorating law and order, which included the 1989 Bhagalpur violence, one of the biggest riots in the state's history. A report tabled in the Bihar Legislative Assembly under the chairmanship of N.N. Singh blamed the Sinha-led INC government for the riots. The 1,000-page report outlined his and his administration's inactivity for almost two months, during which over 1,000 people—mostly poor Muslim weavers—were killed and 50,000 more were displaced.[13]

In 1989, an anti-Congress wave defeated the entrenched INC, and Janata Dal came to power on an anti-corruption wave. In between, the socialist movement led by Mahamaya Prasad Sinha and Karpoori Thakur tried to break the status quo. The movement failed, due to the impractical idealism of its leaders and to the machinations of the INC's central leaders, who felt threatened by the large, politically aware state.[11]

Law and order in Bihar: 1947-1990 edit

Records of the time indicate that in the feudal society of Bihar, the Dalit and landless agricultural labourers suffered not only from the economic hardships but also the undignified practices like Dola Pratha practiced by the upper-caste groups notably, the Rajputs. Under this social practice, the newly wed bride of a Dalit Kamia (labourer) was forced to spend her night before the marriage with the feudal lord.[14] Other sources also indicate that the Dalit women were also sexually available to the upper-caste landlords, as they worked in their fields for low wages.[15] It is also believed that the frequent rapes of these women from the families of agricultural labourers were the cause behind the rise of naxalism in the Bhojpur region of Bihar, an area known for the prevalence of worst form of feudalism.[16][17][15] With the passage of Bihar's land reform legislation, the benefit of which was shared by only a few upper-backward caste groups and the subsequent steps taken by the upper-castes to keep a substantial part of their holdings by manipulating the loopholes in the decree, elevated the naxal movements in the state. But, the class struggle was intriguing in the state, as a section of upper-backwards were also landlords. The participation of middle peasantry or the upper backwards in the class war also remained evident making them involved in a two-front confrontation against both the Dalits, the supporters of naxalite movement as well as the upper-caste, who were adamant to keep the status-quo maintained.[18][19][20][21]

Besides the ongoing class struggle which became a caste war, the police excesses were also rampant in this period and atrocities by the police force on civilians were recorded. There are incidents of the police force abusing civilians, primarily from the lower castes. There are also incidences[spelling?] in which due to caste affiliation and similar factors, the police personnel have attacked the villages inhabited by the lower-castes after the private armies of the upper-caste landlords perpetrated the massacres during the 1970s.[22]

Caste-based violence and police excesses in Bihar: 1947-1990
Incidents Description Trial
Pararia mass rape (1988)
  • In 1988, the police personnel landed upon a village inhabited by Yadav caste and raped women belonging to twenty families, they also abused an old man who resisted the rape of his daughter-in-law.
Belchhi massacre (1977)
  • The Kurmis in the Belchhi village slaughtered approximately thirty Dalits. The causes of the conflict were the issues of wage and rebellion of a Dalit leader Singhwa.[23]
Munger, Chhotki Chhechani and Darmian incidents (1985–86)
  • On the question of land, the Rajputs and Yadavs were pitted against each other which led to attack and retaliation in separate events.[24]
Parasbigha and Dohia incidents (1979–80)
  • In the retaliation of attack by the Bhumihars on their village, Yadavs descended upon the village of Bhumihar caste and due to their inability to find the perpetrators raped the young girls.[25]
Dalelchak-bhagora massacre (1987)

Under Lalu Yadav: 1990–2004 edit

Janata Dal came to power in Bihar in 1990 after its 1989 national victory. Lalu Prasad Yadav became Chief Minister after narrowly winning the leadership contest of the legislative party against Ram Sundar Das, a former chief minister from the Janata Party and close to eminent Janata Party leaders Chandrashekhar and S.N. Sinha. Later, Yadav gained mass popularity with a series of populist measures. The principled socialists, including Nitish Kumar, gradually left him and by 1995, Yadav was both chief minister of the state and president of his party, Rashtriya Janata Dal. He was a popular, charismatic leader.[28]

Caste politics of Yadav edit

 
Lalu Yadav in a rally with Rabri Devi and Subhash Prasad Yadav

According to Seyed Hossein Zarhani, though Lalu Yadav became a figure of hatred among Forward Castes, he had much support from backward castes and Dalits. He was criticised for neglecting development but a study conducted during his premiership among Musahars revealed though the construction of houses for them was not concluded at the required pace, they chose Prasad because he returned them their ijjat (honour) and allowed them to vote for the first time.[29]

During Yadav's tenure, a number of populist policies that directly impacted his backward-caste supporters, including the establishment of "Charvaha schools" for poor children; abolition of cess on toddy, and the rules protecting backward castes were enforced. Yadav mobilised backward castes through his identity politics. He viewed Forward Castes as elite in outlook and portrayed himself as the "Messiah of backwards" by living the same way as his mostly poor supporters. He continued to live in his single-room dwelling after being elected as Chief Minister, though he later moved to the official residence for administrative convenience.[29]

Another significant development during Yadav's premiership was the recruitment of large numbers backward castes and communities to government services. The government's white paper claimed to have a large number of vacancies in health and other sectors. The rules of recruitment were changed to benefit backward castes who supported Lalu. The frequent transfer of existing officers, who were at the higher echelon of bureaucracy, was an important feature of Yadav's and Rabri Devi's administration, which led to the collapse of entire system. Yadav, however, continued to lead Bihar due to massive support from backward castes, to whom he projected "honour" to be more important than development. According to Zarhani, for the lower castes he was a charismatic leader who succeeded in becoming their voice.[29]

Yadav mobilised his Dalit supporters by popularising the lower-caste folk heroes, who were famed for vanquishing the upper caste adversaries, for example, a popular Dalit saint who ran away with an upper caste girl and suppressed all her kin. Praising him could enrage Bhumihar caste in some parts of Bihar but Yadav participated in a grand celebration every year near Patna. His energetic participation in this show made it a rallying point for Dalits, who saw it as their victory and the harassment of upper castes.[30]

Yadav could not restart development of the state. When corruption charges were laid against him, he resigned as chief minister and appointed his wife Rabri Devi, in his place, allowing himself to rule by proxy, and the administration quickly deteriorated.[31]

According to Kalyani Shankar, Yadav created a feeling among the oppressed castes that they are the real rulers of state under him. The upper caste, 13.2% of the population, controlled most of the land while the backwards castes, 51% of the population, own very little land. With the advent of Yadav, the economic profile of the state changed as the backward castes diversified their occupations and also controlled more land. By stopping Lal Krishna Advani's controversial "Ram Rath Yatra", Yadav also installed a sense of confidence among Muslims, who developed a sense of insecurity after the 1989 Bhagalpur Riots. According to Shankar, during this period, upper castes were marginalised and backwards castes came to control the power firmly.[32]

Rabri Devi's administration edit

When Rabri Devi succeeded Lalu Yadav as Chief Minister, Yadav, who was jailed, was still able to influence the government. This period saw the rise of strongmen from both upper and backward castes. The Yadav-Rabri administration was not supported by Forward Castes due to their political and socio-economic marginalisation under Yadav's rule. A number of influential criminals, who were portrayed as leaders of their castes, entered politics as a reaction against Yadav's "backward caste politics".[33] People like Vijay Kumar Shukla (Munna Shukla), Anand Mohan Singh, Rama Singh and Prabhunath Singh supported the upper castes by launching retribution against lower and middle castes. In Vaishali district, for example, Munna Shukla and his associates consistently clashed with Yadav's minister Brij Bihari Prasad, a Bania, resulting in assassination of Chhotan Shukla, Munna's brother and associate, in the retribution of which Prasad was also killed. Anand Mohan also brought havoc to the supporters of a Reservation and Mandal Commission report by forming his "Samajwadi Krantikari Sena", which was a lynching party of upper castes until it was taken over by Yadav's close confidante Pappu Yadav.[34] Munna Shukla and Anand Mohan were convicted of the murder of Gopalganj District Magistrate, G. Krishnaiah, a Dalit.[35]

Lalu Yadav's brothers-in-law Sadhu Yadav and Subhash Prasad Yadav, were also running parallel governments in their own areas of influence.[36] Devi was not able to cope with the situation, nor with the flourishing private armies of the landlords, which had existed since the 1960s. In retaliation, the landless labourers and the poor middle-caste peasantry began their own organisations, such as Lal Sena and the Communist Party of India (Marxist–Leninist) Liberation.

A number of big massacres had also taken place in the decades before Yadav's and Rabri's administrations. In the Dalelchak-bhagora massacre, during Bindeshwari Dubey's government, 42 Rajputs were killed by the Maoist Communist Centre (MCC), one of Yadav caste's lynching parties.[37] The MCC also committed the Senari carnage, in which Bhumihars were victimised. Large numbers of Dalits were also killed by the upper castes, in the Laxmanpur Bathe massacre. In the Nawada region, the Ashok Mahto gang formed by Koeri and Kurmis, was in a drawn-out battle with the "Akhilesh Singh gang" of Bhumihars. The Mahto gang killed Akhilesh Singh's father-in-law and a number of his family members, causing a severe blow to the ambitions of the Akhilesh Singh gang that was poised to take control of the rural area.[38]

The root cause of these skirmishes was attempts to grab land in the wake of the deteriorating economy and administration: the Dalelchak-Bhagora massacre was precipitated by a conflict over hundreds of acres of disputed land between Yadavs and Rajputs; in the case of Nawada, the claimants were Koeri-Kurmi and Bhumihars.[37][38] The Naxalite cadres, who were mobilising people from lower castes, were active since 1960s, when the first mass murders of upper caste landlords occurred under the leadership of Jagdish Mahto.[39] The upper castes countered these forces with their private armies like Kuer Sena and Ranvir Sena, while landlords from backward castes did the same through Bhumi Sena and the Lorik Sena.[40]

Rape as a tool to establish caste supremacy edit

The premiership of Rabri Devi reportedly saw rise in the incidents of rape, which in most of the cases was seen as the tool to establish caste supremacy upon the lower castes by the dominant caste groups, prevalent since post colonial period. Among those caste groups who were perpetrating such incidents were the Rajputs, Bhumihars[41] and the Yadavs. In one of such incidents a girl was abducted and raped by a Rajput landlord who deserted her after repeatedly raping her for a month. When the victim tried to file a police report, she was subjected to custodial rape for two successive nights by the station in charge, Badri Singh and Deputy Superintendent of Police, Arvind Thakur. In another incident, a group of armed Yadav men fell upon a village, exploding crude bombs and burning the huts of the Dalits. The anguished villagers fled to save their lives while a woman was dragged out, beaten and consequently raped by the perpetrators. It was believed that political connection of the criminals was the reason behind inactivity of police in many of such cases.[42]

The assertion of caste supremacy through rapes was not a new phenomenon in the state. In the feudal society of post-colonial Bihar too, there are reports of Rajput landlords visiting the villages inhabited by Harijans and asking the men to send their wives and daughters to the Kothi to spend the night with the landlord. It was also reported through a senior police officer, which could be true for some parts of Bihar like Jehanabad, that a practice of making the husband of the Dalit woman lay below the cot where the landlord would rape her wife keeping his rifle besides her, prevailed. If there would be any sort of movement or the attempt to resist the rape, the landlord would shoot her husband to death. Various reports indicate the underreporting of such cases in the subsequent periods.[43]

2004: Kumar's administration edit

 
Chief Minister of Bihar Nitish Kumar with Narendra Modi in 2017

By 2004, The Economist magazine said "Bihar [had] become a byword for the worst of India, of widespread and inescapable poverty, of corrupt politicians indistinguishable from mafia-dons they patronise, caste-ridden social order that has retained the worst feudal cruelties".[44] As public disaffection intensified, the RJD was voted out of power and Yadav lost an election to a coalition headed by his former ally Nitish Kumar.

Politics of development under Kumar edit

Nitish Kumar, a once-close aide of Lalu Yadav, split with his party after the "Yadavisation" of politics and the administration. According to Arun Sinha, Yadav initially wanted to project Kumar as the leader of the Kurmi community, but Kumar had much bigger ambitions. On many occasions, Kumar refrained from associating himself with a particular community, even his own caste. During Yadav's tenure, a Kurmi chetna rally was organised in Patna. Kumar initially decided not to attend the rally but he and George Fernández eventually attended. At the rally, Kumar attacked Yadav's rule and the alleged marginalisation of other castes, who were equally ambitious as the Yadavs.[45]

Initially, Kumar suffered defeats to Yadav and his party but was eventually able to form a social axis of "forward castes" with Koeri and Kurmi caste, who were Kumar's core supporters.[46] After assuming power, Kumar launched a series of strikes against criminal politicians. All of the former "bahubalis" (strongman) politicians were jailed, as were the politicians-turned-criminals Prabhunath Singh, Mohammad Shahabuddin and Anand Mohan Singh. In his bid to make Bihar crime-free, many politicians from Kumar's own party were arrested.[47] The era of "identity politics" unleashed by Yadav was replaced by "politics of development". Though caste-based rallies were still organised to mobilise voters during elections, Kumar's detachment from such rallies became a point of discussion. A rally of Kurmis in Gandhi Maidan drew statewide attention when media reported that while the crowd was enthused by the presence of Chief Minister and slogans like Garv se kaho ham Kurmi hai (say it with pride, I am a Kurmi) were chanted, he did not utter a word on caste.[48]

2015 onwards: Alliance of RJD and JDU edit

Nitish Kumar had displaced Yadav's Rashtriya Janata Dal from power in 2005 by forging alliance with the right-wing Bharatiya Janata Party, with massive support base among the privileged upper-caste and urban population, specially the trader class. Later, he consolidated his vote base by including many other deprived communities in the fold of this newly formed alliance, which included some of the caste groups placed at the lowest level in the caste hierarchy like Doms and Musahars. The support among them was sought by placing them into the category of Mahadalit which entailed separate affirmative actions for their socio-economic advancement. The distribution of bicycles for school girls from poor families were other steps taken by him. Kumar sought the transfer of a portion of backward caste votes which was to be merged with BJP's vote base in order to make the alliance formidable one.[49]

In the subsequent years, Kumar remained critical to the Yadav's politics and even accused his rule as Jungleraj (the era of misgovernance) while reminding his electorate of the same. It was reported that after assuming power in 2005, he let the law enforcement authorities loose on the petty criminals and also on those who were patronised during his predecessor's regime.[50]

There have been instances when Kumar engaged in the battle of words against Yadav family. In 2010, Rabri Devi reportedly called Kumar a "thief" and "dishonest" to which Kumar also responded by calling Yadav family, recalcitrants who have decided never to reform.[51]

 
Nitish Kumar and Lalu Prasad Yadav discussing with the Prime Minister, Dr. Manmohan Singh about the relief operations on flood-affected areas, in Bihar, 28 August 2008.

In 2015, following his ideological differences with the Bharatiya Janta Party, Nitish Kumar switched the grand old alliance becoming the member of Mahagathbandhan or the grand alliance along with his chief political rival Rashtriya Janata Dal of Yadav.[52] Earlier, Kumar had been contesting the elections upon the promises of development which was evident from the manifesto of his party but the new alliance brought the conundrum of confronting BJP's Hindutva politics. The Bharatiya Janata Party had been securing the victories on the basis of its majoritarian ideology as well as "Modi factor" amidst communally charged political atmosphere.[53] The BJP also secured the support of two of the influential caste groups, earlier believed to be the supporters of Yadav and Kumar by managing to win Upendra Kushwaha and Lok Janshakti Party to its side.[54][55] The Hindutva politics was to confront the caste politics as put by social historian Badri Narayan, who identified the political turmoil of 2015 as a part of the challenge faced by many regional political parties and the leaders all of which enjoyed the support of specific caste groups within their states. Yadav was the key factor in this election who raised the popular slogan of "Mandal versus Kamandal", a slogan popular in 1990 when BJP responded to the politics of quota for the backward castes with its communal politics in order to subdue caste-based identity under the unique Hindu identity. Going a step further, Yadav demanded 60% reservation for the lower castes employed in the private sector and the contract jobs.[56][57]

 
Narendra Modi performing Bhoomi Pujan at 'Shree Ram Janmabhoomi Mandir', in Ayodhya, Uttar Pradesh.

During the election campaigning set in the charged political atmosphere of 2015, the caste and religion-based mobilisation of the voters began. Yadav's remarks in which he argued that some Hindus eat beef provided an opportunity to the BJP which instigated the Hindus, including the Yadavs to vote the grand alliance out of power. Narendra Modi himself made this remark a campaign issue and attacked Yadav in his rallies.[58]

In due course, the BJP arranged its leaders and Bollywood superstars for its election campaigning, all of them remaining critical to Kumar's rule and the criticism of the grand alliance was made in every rally by the BJP leaders and their star campaigners to which Kumar left Yadav to defend himself. The narrative of "Bade Bhai" (big brother), the word used by Kumar for Yadav was also popularised.[59][60] It is believed that the BJP's rise under Modi in 2014 General Elections was a counterrevolution against the Mandal gains. According to Jaffrelot, the rising to power of BJP led to the return of upper castes in urban politics with nearly 45% of the BJP Member of Parliament belonging to the upper-caste, a consequence of this over-representation was the disproportionate ticket distribution plan of the BJP. The return of the upper castes to politics also revived some of their orthodoxy and ethos via state vigilantism. One of the evident strategies of BJP to counter Mandal gains was the restructuring of quota rules to the benefit of upper castes which includes the lateral entry and privatisation as Jaffrelot sums up.[61]

A Times of India report called this alliance as the attempt to revive Triveni Sangh, a pre-independence alliance of three middle peasant castes, which was called as the first attempt of the backward communities to unite under an organisational structure, in order to seek political representation. Based on the input of the political thinkers from Bihar, the report called the Yadav-Kumar alliance, the coalition of middle castes who were traditionally involved in agricultural and allied activities in pre-independence period.[62][63]

Despite speculation by the media, the Lalu-Nitish alliance trumped the BJP and its coalition partners, securing a majority of seats in the Bihar Legislative Assembly. The victory came with the largest ever increase in the number of the OBC candidates primarily from the Yadav, Kurmi and the Koeri caste; who were the core voters of the alliance. It was also reported that due to these three castes voting together after a long time since Kumar defected from Yadav's Janata Dal in the 1990s, the upper-caste representation reached its lowest at 23.9% in the Bihar assembly.[64][65]

MLAs Yadavas SC ST Muslims Rajput Koeri Bhumihars Kurmi Vaishya Brahmins Kayasta Others
243 61 38 2 24 19 19 17 16 16 10 3 67
Source:[66]

Splits and mergers in the JD(U) and emergence of new coalitions edit

 
Upendra Kushwaha addressing at the launch of KV SHAALA DARPAN for Kendriya Vidyalaya, in New Delhi.

The Janata Dal (United), a successor of Samata Party, replaced the Rashtriya Janata Dal in the period after misgovernance of Rabri Devi regime. The JD(U) however failed to remain intact amidst splits and defection created in it by some of the old leaders of party who defected from it on the ground of ideological conflicts. Upendra Kushwaha, who claimed to be the tallest leader of the Kushwaha caste, thus defected to found his own political party in 2013. Kushwaha had defected from JD(U) earlier too, but had returned to its fold due to poor performance of his party and conciliatory measures taken by JD(U) leadership to bring him again into the party. However, the defection of 2013 led to foundation of Rashtriya Lok Samata Party which gave impressive performance in 2014 elections to the Lok Sabha by winning three seats in alliance with the Bharatiya Janata Party. The performance of Rashtriya Lok Samata Party hadn't remained impressive afterwards, specially after Kushwaha brought it out of the National Democratic Alliance over the question of less seats allotted to it in 2019 Lok Sabha polls. The party then contested the 2019 election as a member of Mahagathbandhan.[67]

The party performed badly again and the new alliance was sought with minor players like Bahujan Samaj Party and AIMIM in 2020 Bihar Legislative Assembly elections. The new coalition which was called as Grand Democratic Secular Front was successful in winning 6 seats in the elections but RLSP failed to win any seats despite having largest share of votes among its coalition partners. The RLSP however successfully deteriorated the caste equation of JD(U) in a dozen constituencies, which resulted in reduction of the number of seats of JD (U) to 43 in 2020 Bihar Assembly. The Bharatiya Janata Party now emerged as significant player in the house with 75 seats. The conflict between the officeholders of the JD(U) and BJP also surfaced over the choice of Chief Minister, as many of the BJP leaders and workers wanted the Chief Ministerial candidate from the BJP, which was second largest party in the house and a bigger partner in the alliance in comparison to the JD(U). The top leaders of BJP however proposed Nitish Kumar as the leader of coalition and the next chief minister once again. The government formation in 2020 witnessed dominance of BJP, which got more ministerial births and appointed two Deputy Chief Ministers, both belonging to Extremely Backward Castes in order to create a new caste coalition for itself. In the aftermath of government formation, the JD (U) took energetic steps to recover its lost vote base by engulfing the leaders from smaller parties like Bahujan Samaj Party and the organisational changes were also made by appointing Ramchandra Prasad Singh and Umesh Kushwaha as its National and state president, in a bid to strengthen the Luv-Kush alliance (defined as the coalition of Kurmi and Kushwaha caste). The most awaited step to strengthen this alliance was the merger of Rashtriya Lok Samata Party into JD(U) in 2021, after which its leader Upendra Kushwaha was appointed as the president of parliamentary board of the JD(U).[68][69][67][70][71]

Present condition edit

Despite the separation from Bihar of financially richer Jharkhand, Bihar has seen more growth in recent years.[72]

In 2024, Nitish Kumar, Chief Minister of Bihar, has once again switched allegiances, a 5th U-turn, leaving the Mahagathbandhan opposition alliance to rejoin the BJP-led NDA coalition.[73] There are many other political groupings : Pashupati Kumar Paras led Rashtriya Lok Janshakti Party is a constituent of the NDA, and does not agree with Yadav's RJD; the weakened Communist Party of India; CPM and Forward Bloc have minor presences; ultra left parties like CPML and Party Unity have significant following in some parts of Bihar.

Gallery edit

Elections edit

 
Voters display their identity cards at Samudayak Bhawan, Nathpur, Bhagalpur, Bihar, during the third phase of General Election-2009

General elections edit

Lok Sabha constituencies in Bihar
Year Lok Sabha Election Total Seats Winning Party/Coalition Winner's seat
1951 First Lok Sabha Indian National Congress
1957 Second Lok Sabha Indian National Congress
1962 Third Lok Sabha Indian National Congress
1967 Fourth Lok Sabha Indian National Congress
1971 Fifth Lok Sabha Indian National Congress
1977 Sixth Lok Sabha Indian National Congress
1980 Seventh Lok Sabha Indian National Congress (Indira)
1984 Eighth Lok Sabha Indian National Congress (Indira)
1989 Ninth Lok Sabha Indian National Congress (Indira)
1991 Tenth Lok Sabha Indian National Congress
1996 Eleventh Lok Sabha
1998 Twelfth Lok Sabha National Democratic Alliance
1999 Thirteenth Lok Sabha National Democratic Alliance
2004 Fourteenth Lok Sabha National Democratic Alliance
2009 Fifteenth Lok Sabha National Democratic Alliance
2014 Sixteenth Lok Sabha National Democratic Alliance
2019 Seventeenth Lok Sabha National Democratic Alliance

Political parties in Bihar edit

National parties edit

Regional Parties in Bihar edit

See also edit

References edit

Citations edit

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General bibliography edit

  • Radhakanta Barik, Land & Caste Politics in Bihar (Shipra Publications, Delhi, 2006)
  • Jagannath Sarkar, Many Streams: Selected Essays by Jagannath Sarkar and Reminiscing Sketches. Compiled by Gautam Sarkar Edited by Mitali Sarkar, first published May 2010, Navakarnataka Publications Private Limited, Bangalore.
  • Srivastava, Sumit Saurabh. "EMERGENCE OF BACKWARD CASTE POLITICS IN BIHAR: COALITION, ALIGNMENT AND DOMINANCE." The Indian Journal of Political Science, vol. 75, no. 4, 2014, pp. 675–86. JSTOR, https://www.jstor.org/stable/26575546. Accessed 26 Aug. 2023.
  • Rajkishor. "UNDERSTANDING THE POLITICS OF BIHAR: THROUGH THE PRISM OF CASTE, CLASS AND COMMUNITY; FROM COLONIALISM TO POSTCOLONIALISM." Proceedings of the Indian History Congress, vol. 77, 2016, pp. 539–45. JSTOR, https://www.jstor.org/stable/26552681. Accessed 8 Sept. 2023.

External links edit

  • Official website
  • Profile at the Government of India website
  • Bihar CM official website 26 February 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  • A former IAS officer reflects on the mess in Bihar

politics, bihar, politics, bihar, eastern, state, india, dominated, regional, political, parties, 2021, update, main, political, groups, rashtriya, janata, bharatiya, janata, party, janata, united, indian, national, congress, left, front, janshakti, party, hin. The politics of Bihar an eastern state of India is dominated by regional political parties As of 2021 update the main political groups are Rashtriya Janata Dal RJD Bharatiya Janata Party BJP Janata Dal United JDU Indian National Congress INC Left Front Lok Janshakti Party LJP Hindustani Awam Morcha HAM There are also some smaller regional parties including Samata Party 1 Hindustani Awam Morcha Rashtriya Jan Jan Party Rashtriya Lok Janata Dal Jan Adhikar Party and Vikassheel Insaan Party Lok Janshakti Party Ram Vilas and Rashtriya Lok Janshakti Party which play a vital role in politics of state As of 2024 Bihar is currently ruled by NDA after JDU break out from Mahagatbandhan Grandalliance coalition and returned to NDA fold 2 Contents 1 Administration and governments 2 History 2 1 1937 to 1977 2 2 Post Independence 1950 1975 2 3 Bihar movement and aftermath 1975 1990 2 3 1 Law and order in Bihar 1947 1990 3 Under Lalu Yadav 1990 2004 3 1 Caste politics of Yadav 3 2 Rabri Devi s administration 3 2 1 Rape as a tool to establish caste supremacy 3 3 2004 Kumar s administration 4 Politics of development under Kumar 4 1 2015 onwards Alliance of RJD and JDU 5 Splits and mergers in the JD U and emergence of new coalitions 6 Present condition 7 Gallery 8 Elections 8 1 General elections 9 Political parties in Bihar 9 1 National parties 9 2 Regional Parties in Bihar 10 See also 11 References 11 1 Citations 11 2 General bibliography 12 External linksAdministration and governments editMain articles Government of Bihar and Administration in Bihar See also Divisions of Bihar and Districts of Bihar nbsp Vidhansabha Building Patna The constitutional head of the Government of Bihar is the Governor who is appointed by the President of India Executive power rests with the Chief Minister and the cabinet The political party or the coalition of parties that has a majority in the Legislative Assembly forms the government The first Chief Minister of Bihar was Krishna Sinha and the first Deputy Chief Minister was Anugrah Narayan Sinha 3 In 2014 the incumbent Chief Minister Nitish Kumar succeeded Jitan Ram Manjhi who was sacked from his office 4 In his previous term Kumar resigned after the general election in 2014 after which Manjhi took over The head of the state bureaucracy is the Chief Secretary Under him is a hierarchy of officials drawn from the Indian Administrative Service Indian Police Service and other wings of the state civil services The judiciary is headed by the Chief Justice Bihar has a High Court that has been functioning since 1916 All of the government headquarters are situated in the state capital Patna For administrative purposes Bihar state has nine divisions Patna Tirhut Saran Darbhanga Kosi Purnia Bhagalpur Munger and Magadh Division which between them are subdivided into thirty eight districts 3 History edit1937 to 1977 edit The politics of Bihar is largely driven by caste consciousness and this holds true for the pre independence period as well when first Indian National Congress government was about to be formed in the state in 1937 At that time in Bihar Provincial Congress Party there were two caste factions which were led respectively by Sri Krishna Sinha and Anugrah Narayan Sinha While Sri Krishna Sinha represented the Bhumihars Anugrah Narayan Sinha represented the Rajput caste These two factions were contesting for the power within Congress in 1937 elections but Anugrah Narayan Sinha didn t contest election and the way for rise of Sri Krishna Sinha to the post of premier of the state was made smooth Sri Krishna Sinha hence became the first head of state and he served as Chief Minister till his death in 1961 Anugrah Narayan Sinha died in 1957 5 After death of both these leaders new caste factions were formed in Congress While one of these faction was led by Binodanand Jha and Mahesh Prasad Sinha another faction was led by Krishna Ballabh Sahay There was tussle between Binodanand Jha and Mahesh Prasad Sinha now for power Jha represented Brahmins and Sinha represented Bhumihars However Binodanand Jha was able to defeat Mahesh Prasad Sinha in race to premiership as he was able to form a coalition of Rajputs Brahmins and Kayasthas which was also supported by Scheduled Castes and Muslims Consequently Jha was appointed as new Chief Minister However after becoming Chief Minister during one cabinet rearrangement he didn t include Krishna Ballabh Sahay who had supported him earlier Rather Jha gave primacy to Satyendra Narayan Sinha son of Anugrah Narayan Sinha This event led to defection of Sahay towards the faction led by Mahesh Prasad Sinha 6 As per one opinion Sahay locked horns with Satyendra Narayan Sinha over his plan to give more representation to numerically preponderant Backward Castes like Ahir Kurmi and Koeri in government and administration Binodanand Jha had restored the Zamindari Rights of Tatas in Jamshedpur in his tenure and when Jha resigned following the Kamraj Plan It was a scheme formulated by Congress leader K Kamraj that old leadership should leave their position and give way to young leaders in Congress organisational structure in order to consolidate his power Sahay after taking over the leadership of Bihar Congress in 1963 wanted to create a coalition of the numerically strong Backward Castes He recommended a number of times that these Backward Castes were underrepresented in politics and they should be given more positions and representation however Satyendra Narayan Sinha took it as a challenge to the privileges enjoyed by the elite caste groups Sahay had the support of Ram Lakhan Singh Yadav a Backward Caste leader in his bid Consequently S N Sinha and Sahay were divided into rival political camps 7 Post Independence 1950 1975 edit nbsp First Chief Minister of Bihar Dr Srikrishna Singh The first Bihar governments in 1946 were led by Shri Krishna Sinha and Anugrah Narayan Sinha 3 After the independence of India power was shared by these Gandhian nationalists Krishna Sinha became the first Chief Minister and Anugrah Narayan Sinha served as the first Deputy Chief Minister cum Finance Minister The death of the central railway minister Lalit Narayan Mishra in a hand grenade attack in late 1960s brought an end to indigenous work oriented mass leaders The Indian National Congress INC controlled the state for next two decades at this time prominent leader Satyendra Narayan Singh left the INC following ideological differences and joined the Janata Party 3 Bihar movement and aftermath 1975 1990 edit See also Jayaprakash Narayan Bihar movement and Indian Emergency nbsp The architect of Total Revolution Jayprakash Narayan with Jawaharlal Nehru After independence also when India was falling into an autocratic rule during the Indira Gandhi regime the main thrust to the movement to hold elections came from Bihar under the leadership of Jayaprakash Narayan In 1974 Narayan led the student s movement in Bihar which gradually developed into the popular Bihar Movement during which JP called for a peaceful Total Revolution He and V M Tarkunde founded the Citizens for Democracy in 1974 and the People s Union for Civil Liberties in 1976 to uphold and defend civil liberties On 23 January 1977 Indira Gandhi called fresh elections for the following March and released all political prisoners The Indian Emergency imposed by Indira Gandhi officially ended on 23 March 1977 In the election the INC was defeated by the Janata Party a coalition of several small parties created in 1977 The alliance was headed by Morarji Desai who became the first non INC Prime Minister of India 8 9 The Janata Party won all the fifty four Lok Sabha seats in Bihar taking power in the state assembly Karpoori Thakur became the Chief Minister after winning a contest from the then Janata Party President Satyendra Narayan Sinha The Communist Party in Bihar was founded in 1939 From the 1960s to the 1980s the Communist movement in the state was led by veteran communist leaders Jagannath Sarkar Sunil Mukherjee Rahul Sankrityayan Pandit Karyanand Sharma Indradeep Sinha and Chandrashekhar Singh Under the leadership of Sarkar the Communist party fought the total revolution led by Jayprakash Narayan as the movement was anti democratic and challenged the fabric of Indian democracy 10 The Bihar Movement campaign warned Indians that the elections might be their last chance to choose between democracy and dictatorship As a consequence of the movement the identity of Bihar from the word Vihar meaning monasteries representing a glorious past was lost Its voice often used to get lost in the din of regional clamour of other states specially the linguistic states like Uttar Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh Bihar also gained an anti establishment image The pro establishment press often projected the state as undisciplined and anarchic 11 Because the regional identity was slowly being sidelined it was replaced by caste based politics power was initially in the hands of the Brahmins Bhumihars and Rajputs In the 1980s there was a change in the political scenario of Bihar riding upon a popular movement of social justice and no vote without representation the middle OBC castes like Yadav Kurmi and Koeri replaced upper castes in politics 12 nbsp Statute of Jagdeo Prasad at the Bir Chand Patel Path Patna Prasad was the progenitor of Backward caste politics in 1970s S N Singh s regime was known for deteriorating law and order which included the 1989 Bhagalpur violence one of the biggest riots in the state s history A report tabled in the Bihar Legislative Assembly under the chairmanship of N N Singh blamed the Sinha led INC government for the riots The 1 000 page report outlined his and his administration s inactivity for almost two months during which over 1 000 people mostly poor Muslim weavers were killed and 50 000 more were displaced 13 In 1989 an anti Congress wave defeated the entrenched INC and Janata Dal came to power on an anti corruption wave In between the socialist movement led by Mahamaya Prasad Sinha and Karpoori Thakur tried to break the status quo The movement failed due to the impractical idealism of its leaders and to the machinations of the INC s central leaders who felt threatened by the large politically aware state 11 Law and order in Bihar 1947 1990 edit Records of the time indicate that in the feudal society of Bihar the Dalit and landless agricultural labourers suffered not only from the economic hardships but also the undignified practices like Dola Pratha practiced by the upper caste groups notably the Rajputs Under this social practice the newly wed bride of a Dalit Kamia labourer was forced to spend her night before the marriage with the feudal lord 14 Other sources also indicate that the Dalit women were also sexually available to the upper caste landlords as they worked in their fields for low wages 15 It is also believed that the frequent rapes of these women from the families of agricultural labourers were the cause behind the rise of naxalism in the Bhojpur region of Bihar an area known for the prevalence of worst form of feudalism 16 17 15 With the passage of Bihar s land reform legislation the benefit of which was shared by only a few upper backward caste groups and the subsequent steps taken by the upper castes to keep a substantial part of their holdings by manipulating the loopholes in the decree elevated the naxal movements in the state But the class struggle was intriguing in the state as a section of upper backwards were also landlords The participation of middle peasantry or the upper backwards in the class war also remained evident making them involved in a two front confrontation against both the Dalits the supporters of naxalite movement as well as the upper caste who were adamant to keep the status quo maintained 18 19 20 21 Besides the ongoing class struggle which became a caste war the police excesses were also rampant in this period and atrocities by the police force on civilians were recorded There are incidents of the police force abusing civilians primarily from the lower castes There are also incidences spelling in which due to caste affiliation and similar factors the police personnel have attacked the villages inhabited by the lower castes after the private armies of the upper caste landlords perpetrated the massacres during the 1970s 22 Caste based violence and police excesses in Bihar 1947 1990 Incidents Description Trial Pararia mass rape 1988 In 1988 the police personnel landed upon a village inhabited by Yadav caste and raped women belonging to twenty families they also abused an old man who resisted the rape of his daughter in law Belchhi massacre 1977 The Kurmis in the Belchhi village slaughtered approximately thirty Dalits The causes of the conflict were the issues of wage and rebellion of a Dalit leader Singhwa 23 Munger Chhotki Chhechani and Darmian incidents 1985 86 On the question of land the Rajputs and Yadavs were pitted against each other which led to attack and retaliation in separate events 24 Parasbigha and Dohia incidents 1979 80 In the retaliation of attack by the Bhumihars on their village Yadavs descended upon the village of Bhumihar caste and due to their inability to find the perpetrators raped the young girls 25 Dalelchak bhagora massacre 1987 In the tenure of Bindeshwari Dubey the MCC unit dominated by Yadavs massacred up to fifty Rajputs in the twin village of Dalelchak bhagora 26 27 See also List of massacres in BiharUnder Lalu Yadav 1990 2004 editJanata Dal came to power in Bihar in 1990 after its 1989 national victory Lalu Prasad Yadav became Chief Minister after narrowly winning the leadership contest of the legislative party against Ram Sundar Das a former chief minister from the Janata Party and close to eminent Janata Party leaders Chandrashekhar and S N Sinha Later Yadav gained mass popularity with a series of populist measures The principled socialists including Nitish Kumar gradually left him and by 1995 Yadav was both chief minister of the state and president of his party Rashtriya Janata Dal He was a popular charismatic leader 28 Caste politics of Yadav edit nbsp Lalu Yadav in a rally with Rabri Devi and Subhash Prasad Yadav According to Seyed Hossein Zarhani though Lalu Yadav became a figure of hatred among Forward Castes he had much support from backward castes and Dalits He was criticised for neglecting development but a study conducted during his premiership among Musahars revealed though the construction of houses for them was not concluded at the required pace they chose Prasad because he returned them their ijjat honour and allowed them to vote for the first time 29 During Yadav s tenure a number of populist policies that directly impacted his backward caste supporters including the establishment of Charvaha schools for poor children abolition of cess on toddy and the rules protecting backward castes were enforced Yadav mobilised backward castes through his identity politics He viewed Forward Castes as elite in outlook and portrayed himself as the Messiah of backwards by living the same way as his mostly poor supporters He continued to live in his single room dwelling after being elected as Chief Minister though he later moved to the official residence for administrative convenience 29 Another significant development during Yadav s premiership was the recruitment of large numbers backward castes and communities to government services The government s white paper claimed to have a large number of vacancies in health and other sectors The rules of recruitment were changed to benefit backward castes who supported Lalu The frequent transfer of existing officers who were at the higher echelon of bureaucracy was an important feature of Yadav s and Rabri Devi s administration which led to the collapse of entire system Yadav however continued to lead Bihar due to massive support from backward castes to whom he projected honour to be more important than development According to Zarhani for the lower castes he was a charismatic leader who succeeded in becoming their voice 29 Yadav mobilised his Dalit supporters by popularising the lower caste folk heroes who were famed for vanquishing the upper caste adversaries for example a popular Dalit saint who ran away with an upper caste girl and suppressed all her kin Praising him could enrage Bhumihar caste in some parts of Bihar but Yadav participated in a grand celebration every year near Patna His energetic participation in this show made it a rallying point for Dalits who saw it as their victory and the harassment of upper castes 30 Yadav could not restart development of the state When corruption charges were laid against him he resigned as chief minister and appointed his wife Rabri Devi in his place allowing himself to rule by proxy and the administration quickly deteriorated 31 According to Kalyani Shankar Yadav created a feeling among the oppressed castes that they are the real rulers of state under him The upper caste 13 2 of the population controlled most of the land while the backwards castes 51 of the population own very little land With the advent of Yadav the economic profile of the state changed as the backward castes diversified their occupations and also controlled more land By stopping Lal Krishna Advani s controversial Ram Rath Yatra Yadav also installed a sense of confidence among Muslims who developed a sense of insecurity after the 1989 Bhagalpur Riots According to Shankar during this period upper castes were marginalised and backwards castes came to control the power firmly 32 Rabri Devi s administration edit When Rabri Devi succeeded Lalu Yadav as Chief Minister Yadav who was jailed was still able to influence the government This period saw the rise of strongmen from both upper and backward castes The Yadav Rabri administration was not supported by Forward Castes due to their political and socio economic marginalisation under Yadav s rule A number of influential criminals who were portrayed as leaders of their castes entered politics as a reaction against Yadav s backward caste politics 33 People like Vijay Kumar Shukla Munna Shukla Anand Mohan Singh Rama Singh and Prabhunath Singh supported the upper castes by launching retribution against lower and middle castes In Vaishali district for example Munna Shukla and his associates consistently clashed with Yadav s minister Brij Bihari Prasad a Bania resulting in assassination of Chhotan Shukla Munna s brother and associate in the retribution of which Prasad was also killed Anand Mohan also brought havoc to the supporters of a Reservation and Mandal Commission report by forming his Samajwadi Krantikari Sena which was a lynching party of upper castes until it was taken over by Yadav s close confidante Pappu Yadav 34 Munna Shukla and Anand Mohan were convicted of the murder of Gopalganj District Magistrate G Krishnaiah a Dalit 35 Lalu Yadav s brothers in law Sadhu Yadav and Subhash Prasad Yadav were also running parallel governments in their own areas of influence 36 Devi was not able to cope with the situation nor with the flourishing private armies of the landlords which had existed since the 1960s In retaliation the landless labourers and the poor middle caste peasantry began their own organisations such as Lal Sena and the Communist Party of India Marxist Leninist Liberation A number of big massacres had also taken place in the decades before Yadav s and Rabri s administrations In the Dalelchak bhagora massacre during Bindeshwari Dubey s government 42 Rajputs were killed by the Maoist Communist Centre MCC one of Yadav caste s lynching parties 37 The MCC also committed the Senari carnage in which Bhumihars were victimised Large numbers of Dalits were also killed by the upper castes in the Laxmanpur Bathe massacre In the Nawada region the Ashok Mahto gang formed by Koeri and Kurmis was in a drawn out battle with the Akhilesh Singh gang of Bhumihars The Mahto gang killed Akhilesh Singh s father in law and a number of his family members causing a severe blow to the ambitions of the Akhilesh Singh gang that was poised to take control of the rural area 38 The root cause of these skirmishes was attempts to grab land in the wake of the deteriorating economy and administration the Dalelchak Bhagora massacre was precipitated by a conflict over hundreds of acres of disputed land between Yadavs and Rajputs in the case of Nawada the claimants were Koeri Kurmi and Bhumihars 37 38 The Naxalite cadres who were mobilising people from lower castes were active since 1960s when the first mass murders of upper caste landlords occurred under the leadership of Jagdish Mahto 39 The upper castes countered these forces with their private armies like Kuer Sena and Ranvir Sena while landlords from backward castes did the same through Bhumi Sena and the Lorik Sena 40 Rape as a tool to establish caste supremacy edit The premiership of Rabri Devi reportedly saw rise in the incidents of rape which in most of the cases was seen as the tool to establish caste supremacy upon the lower castes by the dominant caste groups prevalent since post colonial period Among those caste groups who were perpetrating such incidents were the Rajputs Bhumihars 41 and the Yadavs In one of such incidents a girl was abducted and raped by a Rajput landlord who deserted her after repeatedly raping her for a month When the victim tried to file a police report she was subjected to custodial rape for two successive nights by the station in charge Badri Singh and Deputy Superintendent of Police Arvind Thakur In another incident a group of armed Yadav men fell upon a village exploding crude bombs and burning the huts of the Dalits The anguished villagers fled to save their lives while a woman was dragged out beaten and consequently raped by the perpetrators It was believed that political connection of the criminals was the reason behind inactivity of police in many of such cases 42 The assertion of caste supremacy through rapes was not a new phenomenon in the state In the feudal society of post colonial Bihar too there are reports of Rajput landlords visiting the villages inhabited by Harijans and asking the men to send their wives and daughters to the Kothi to spend the night with the landlord It was also reported through a senior police officer which could be true for some parts of Bihar like Jehanabad that a practice of making the husband of the Dalit woman lay below the cot where the landlord would rape her wife keeping his rifle besides her prevailed If there would be any sort of movement or the attempt to resist the rape the landlord would shoot her husband to death Various reports indicate the underreporting of such cases in the subsequent periods 43 2004 Kumar s administration edit nbsp Chief Minister of Bihar Nitish Kumar with Narendra Modi in 2017 By 2004 The Economist magazine said Bihar had become a byword for the worst of India of widespread and inescapable poverty of corrupt politicians indistinguishable from mafia dons they patronise caste ridden social order that has retained the worst feudal cruelties 44 As public disaffection intensified the RJD was voted out of power and Yadav lost an election to a coalition headed by his former ally Nitish Kumar Politics of development under Kumar editNitish Kumar a once close aide of Lalu Yadav split with his party after the Yadavisation of politics and the administration According to Arun Sinha Yadav initially wanted to project Kumar as the leader of the Kurmi community but Kumar had much bigger ambitions On many occasions Kumar refrained from associating himself with a particular community even his own caste During Yadav s tenure a Kurmi chetna rally was organised in Patna Kumar initially decided not to attend the rally but he and George Fernandez eventually attended At the rally Kumar attacked Yadav s rule and the alleged marginalisation of other castes who were equally ambitious as the Yadavs 45 Initially Kumar suffered defeats to Yadav and his party but was eventually able to form a social axis of forward castes with Koeri and Kurmi caste who were Kumar s core supporters 46 After assuming power Kumar launched a series of strikes against criminal politicians All of the former bahubalis strongman politicians were jailed as were the politicians turned criminals Prabhunath Singh Mohammad Shahabuddin and Anand Mohan Singh In his bid to make Bihar crime free many politicians from Kumar s own party were arrested 47 The era of identity politics unleashed by Yadav was replaced by politics of development Though caste based rallies were still organised to mobilise voters during elections Kumar s detachment from such rallies became a point of discussion A rally of Kurmis in Gandhi Maidan drew statewide attention when media reported that while the crowd was enthused by the presence of Chief Minister and slogans like Garv se kaho ham Kurmi hai say it with pride I am a Kurmi were chanted he did not utter a word on caste 48 2015 onwards Alliance of RJD and JDU edit See also Mahagathbandhan Bihar Nitish Kumar had displaced Yadav s Rashtriya Janata Dal from power in 2005 by forging alliance with the right wing Bharatiya Janata Party with massive support base among the privileged upper caste and urban population specially the trader class Later he consolidated his vote base by including many other deprived communities in the fold of this newly formed alliance which included some of the caste groups placed at the lowest level in the caste hierarchy like Doms and Musahars The support among them was sought by placing them into the category of Mahadalit which entailed separate affirmative actions for their socio economic advancement The distribution of bicycles for school girls from poor families were other steps taken by him Kumar sought the transfer of a portion of backward caste votes which was to be merged with BJP s vote base in order to make the alliance formidable one 49 In the subsequent years Kumar remained critical to the Yadav s politics and even accused his rule as Jungleraj the era of misgovernance while reminding his electorate of the same It was reported that after assuming power in 2005 he let the law enforcement authorities loose on the petty criminals and also on those who were patronised during his predecessor s regime 50 There have been instances when Kumar engaged in the battle of words against Yadav family In 2010 Rabri Devi reportedly called Kumar a thief and dishonest to which Kumar also responded by calling Yadav family recalcitrants who have decided never to reform 51 nbsp Nitish Kumar and Lalu Prasad Yadav discussing with the Prime Minister Dr Manmohan Singh about the relief operations on flood affected areas in Bihar 28 August 2008 In 2015 following his ideological differences with the Bharatiya Janta Party Nitish Kumar switched the grand old alliance becoming the member of Mahagathbandhan or the grand alliance along with his chief political rival Rashtriya Janata Dal of Yadav 52 Earlier Kumar had been contesting the elections upon the promises of development which was evident from the manifesto of his party but the new alliance brought the conundrum of confronting BJP s Hindutva politics The Bharatiya Janata Party had been securing the victories on the basis of its majoritarian ideology as well as Modi factor amidst communally charged political atmosphere 53 The BJP also secured the support of two of the influential caste groups earlier believed to be the supporters of Yadav and Kumar by managing to win Upendra Kushwaha and Lok Janshakti Party to its side 54 55 The Hindutva politics was to confront the caste politics as put by social historian Badri Narayan who identified the political turmoil of 2015 as a part of the challenge faced by many regional political parties and the leaders all of which enjoyed the support of specific caste groups within their states Yadav was the key factor in this election who raised the popular slogan of Mandal versus Kamandal a slogan popular in 1990 when BJP responded to the politics of quota for the backward castes with its communal politics in order to subdue caste based identity under the unique Hindu identity Going a step further Yadav demanded 60 reservation for the lower castes employed in the private sector and the contract jobs 56 57 nbsp Narendra Modi performing Bhoomi Pujan at Shree Ram Janmabhoomi Mandir in Ayodhya Uttar Pradesh During the election campaigning set in the charged political atmosphere of 2015 the caste and religion based mobilisation of the voters began Yadav s remarks in which he argued that some Hindus eat beef provided an opportunity to the BJP which instigated the Hindus including the Yadavs to vote the grand alliance out of power Narendra Modi himself made this remark a campaign issue and attacked Yadav in his rallies 58 In due course the BJP arranged its leaders and Bollywood superstars for its election campaigning all of them remaining critical to Kumar s rule and the criticism of the grand alliance was made in every rally by the BJP leaders and their star campaigners to which Kumar left Yadav to defend himself The narrative of Bade Bhai big brother the word used by Kumar for Yadav was also popularised 59 60 It is believed that the BJP s rise under Modi in 2014 General Elections was a counterrevolution against the Mandal gains According to Jaffrelot the rising to power of BJP led to the return of upper castes in urban politics with nearly 45 of the BJP Member of Parliament belonging to the upper caste a consequence of this over representation was the disproportionate ticket distribution plan of the BJP The return of the upper castes to politics also revived some of their orthodoxy and ethos via state vigilantism One of the evident strategies of BJP to counter Mandal gains was the restructuring of quota rules to the benefit of upper castes which includes the lateral entry and privatisation as Jaffrelot sums up 61 A Times of India report called this alliance as the attempt to revive Triveni Sangh a pre independence alliance of three middle peasant castes which was called as the first attempt of the backward communities to unite under an organisational structure in order to seek political representation Based on the input of the political thinkers from Bihar the report called the Yadav Kumar alliance the coalition of middle castes who were traditionally involved in agricultural and allied activities in pre independence period 62 63 Despite speculation by the media the Lalu Nitish alliance trumped the BJP and its coalition partners securing a majority of seats in the Bihar Legislative Assembly The victory came with the largest ever increase in the number of the OBC candidates primarily from the Yadav Kurmi and the Koeri caste who were the core voters of the alliance It was also reported that due to these three castes voting together after a long time since Kumar defected from Yadav s Janata Dal in the 1990s the upper caste representation reached its lowest at 23 9 in the Bihar assembly 64 65 MLAs Yadavas SC ST Muslims Rajput Koeri Bhumihars Kurmi Vaishya Brahmins Kayasta Others 243 61 38 2 24 19 19 17 16 16 10 3 67 Source 66 Splits and mergers in the JD U and emergence of new coalitions edit nbsp Upendra Kushwaha addressing at the launch of KV SHAALA DARPAN for Kendriya Vidyalaya in New Delhi The Janata Dal United a successor of Samata Party replaced the Rashtriya Janata Dal in the period after misgovernance of Rabri Devi regime The JD U however failed to remain intact amidst splits and defection created in it by some of the old leaders of party who defected from it on the ground of ideological conflicts Upendra Kushwaha who claimed to be the tallest leader of the Kushwaha caste thus defected to found his own political party in 2013 Kushwaha had defected from JD U earlier too but had returned to its fold due to poor performance of his party and conciliatory measures taken by JD U leadership to bring him again into the party However the defection of 2013 led to foundation of Rashtriya Lok Samata Party which gave impressive performance in 2014 elections to the Lok Sabha by winning three seats in alliance with the Bharatiya Janata Party The performance of Rashtriya Lok Samata Party hadn t remained impressive afterwards specially after Kushwaha brought it out of the National Democratic Alliance over the question of less seats allotted to it in 2019 Lok Sabha polls The party then contested the 2019 election as a member of Mahagathbandhan 67 The party performed badly again and the new alliance was sought with minor players like Bahujan Samaj Party and AIMIM in 2020 Bihar Legislative Assembly elections The new coalition which was called as Grand Democratic Secular Front was successful in winning 6 seats in the elections but RLSP failed to win any seats despite having largest share of votes among its coalition partners The RLSP however successfully deteriorated the caste equation of JD U in a dozen constituencies which resulted in reduction of the number of seats of JD U to 43 in 2020 Bihar Assembly The Bharatiya Janata Party now emerged as significant player in the house with 75 seats The conflict between the officeholders of the JD U and BJP also surfaced over the choice of Chief Minister as many of the BJP leaders and workers wanted the Chief Ministerial candidate from the BJP which was second largest party in the house and a bigger partner in the alliance in comparison to the JD U The top leaders of BJP however proposed Nitish Kumar as the leader of coalition and the next chief minister once again The government formation in 2020 witnessed dominance of BJP which got more ministerial births and appointed two Deputy Chief Ministers both belonging to Extremely Backward Castes in order to create a new caste coalition for itself In the aftermath of government formation the JD U took energetic steps to recover its lost vote base by engulfing the leaders from smaller parties like Bahujan Samaj Party and the organisational changes were also made by appointing Ramchandra Prasad Singh and Umesh Kushwaha as its National and state president in a bid to strengthen the Luv Kush alliance defined as the coalition of Kurmi and Kushwaha caste The most awaited step to strengthen this alliance was the merger of Rashtriya Lok Samata Party into JD U in 2021 after which its leader Upendra Kushwaha was appointed as the president of parliamentary board of the JD U 68 69 67 70 71 Present condition editDespite the separation from Bihar of financially richer Jharkhand Bihar has seen more growth in recent years 72 In 2024 Nitish Kumar Chief Minister of Bihar has once again switched allegiances a 5th U turn leaving the Mahagathbandhan opposition alliance to rejoin the BJP led NDA coalition 73 There are many other political groupings Pashupati Kumar Paras led Rashtriya Lok Janshakti Party is a constituent of the NDA and does not agree with Yadav s RJD the weakened Communist Party of India CPM and Forward Bloc have minor presences ultra left parties like CPML and Party Unity have significant following in some parts of Bihar Gallery editNotable politicians of Bihar nbsp Nitish Kumar meeting the Deputy Chairman Planning Commission Shri Montek Singh Ahluwalia for finalizing plan size for 2013 14 for the State in New Delhi The Minister of State for Parliamentary Affairs amp Planning nbsp The Prime Minister Shri Narendra Modi and the Chief Minister of Bihar Shri Nitish Kumar conducting an aerial survey of flood affected areas in Bihar on August 26 2017 nbsp Pratibha Devisingh Patil the Union Minister for Railways Shri Lalu Prasad the Defence Minister Shri A K Antony the Minister of State for Railways Shri R Velu and the Minister of State for Environment and Forests nbsp The Minister of State for Human Resource Development Shri Upendra Kushwaha inaugurating the KVS Rashtriya Ekta Shivir 2017 Ek Bharat Shreshth Bharat in New Delhi on October 31 2017 Elections editMain article Elections in Bihar nbsp Voters display their identity cards at Samudayak Bhawan Nathpur Bhagalpur Bihar during the third phase of General Election 2009 General elections edit Lok Sabha constituencies in Bihar Araria Arrah Aurangabad Banka Begusarai Bhagalpur Buxar Darbhanga Gaya Gopalganj Hajipur Jahanabad Jamui Jhanjharpur Karakat Katihar Khagaria Kishanganj Madhepura Madhubani Maharajganj Munger Muzaffarpur Nalanda Nawada Paschim Champaran Pataliputra Patna Sahib Purnia Purvi Champaran Samastipur Saran Sasaram Sheohar Sitamarhi Siwan Supaul Ujiarpur Vaishali Valmiki Nagar Year Lok Sabha Election Total Seats Winning Party Coalition Winner s seat 1951 First Lok Sabha Indian National Congress 1957 Second Lok Sabha Indian National Congress 1962 Third Lok Sabha Indian National Congress 1967 Fourth Lok Sabha Indian National Congress 1971 Fifth Lok Sabha Indian National Congress 1977 Sixth Lok Sabha Indian National Congress 1980 Seventh Lok Sabha Indian National Congress Indira 1984 Eighth Lok Sabha Indian National Congress Indira 1989 Ninth Lok Sabha Indian National Congress Indira 1991 Tenth Lok Sabha Indian National Congress 1996 Eleventh Lok Sabha 1998 Twelfth Lok Sabha National Democratic Alliance 1999 Thirteenth Lok Sabha National Democratic Alliance 2004 Fourteenth Lok Sabha National Democratic Alliance 2009 Fifteenth Lok Sabha National Democratic Alliance 2014 Sixteenth Lok Sabha National Democratic Alliance 2019 Seventeenth Lok Sabha National Democratic AlliancePolitical parties in Bihar editNational parties edit Bharatiya Janata Party Indian National Congress Communist Party of India Marxist Regional Parties in Bihar edit Rashtriya Janata Dal Janata Dal United Lok Janshakti Party Lok Janshakti Party Ram Vilas Rashtriya Lok Janshakti Party Hindustani Awam Morcha Rashtriya Lok Morcha Vikassheel Insaan Party Communist Party of India Communist Party of India Marxist Leninist Liberation All India Majlis e Ittehadul Muslimeen See also editHistory of Patna Political parties in Bihar List of chief ministers of Bihar List of deputy chief ministers of Bihar List of finance ministers of Bihar Politicians from BiharReferences editCitations edit SAMATA PARTY Official Website Archived from the original on 15 February 2022 Retrieved 8 February 2022 Tewary Amarnath 28 January 2024 Bihar political crisis After submitting resignation Nitish Kumar says relations with RJD has not been good The Hindu ISSN 0971 751X Retrieved 29 January 2024 a b c d Radhakanta Barik 2006 Land and Caste Politics in Bihar Shipra Publications ISBN 81 7541 305 0 Archived from the original on 4 August 2022 Retrieved 13 February 2021 Ghosh Deepshikha 20 May 2014 I m No Rubber Stamp Says Nitish Kumar s Successor Jitan Ram Manjhi Patna NDTV Archived from the original on 20 May 2014 Retrieved 20 May 2014 Srivastava Sumit Saurabh 30 October 2023 EMERGENCE OF BACKWARD CASTE POLITICS IN BIHAR COALITION ALIGNMENT AND DOMINANCE The Indian Journal of Political Science 75 4 675 86 JSTOR 26575546 Roy Ramashray 1966 Intra Party Conflict in the Bihar Congress Asian Survey 6 12 706 15 doi 10 2307 2642196 JSTOR 2642196 Mitra S K 2007 The Puzzle of India s Governance Culture Context and Comparative Theory Taylor amp Francis pp 109 110 ISBN 978 1 134 27493 2 Gort Jerald D Jansen Henry Vroom H M 2002 Religion conflict and reconciliation multifaith ideals and realities Rodopi p 246 ISBN 978 90 420 1460 2 Kesselman Mark Krieger Joel William A Joseph 2009 Introduction to Comparative Politics Political Challenges and Changing Agendas 5 ed Cengage Learning p 298 ISBN 978 0 547 21629 4 Jagannath Sarkar Many Streams Selected Essays by Jagannath Sarkar and Reminiscing Sketches Compiled by Gautam Sarkar Edited by Mitali Sarkar First Published May 2010 Navakarnataka Publications Private Limited Bangalore a b Thakur Baleshwar 2007 City Society and Planning Society University of Akron Department of Geography amp Planning Association of American Geographers Concept Publishing Company pp 397 404 ISBN 978 81 8069 460 8 Archived from the original on 28 July 2021 Retrieved 16 June 2020 Arnold P Kaminsky Roger D Long 2011 इ ड य ट ड An Encyclopedia of Life in the Republic ABC CLIO pp 95 96 ISBN 978 0 313 37462 3 Archived from the original on 4 August 2022 Retrieved 4 March 2012 bhagalpur riots inquiry report blames congress police India Today Archived from the original on 4 August 2022 Retrieved 8 August 2020 Ranabir Samaddar 2009 State of Justice In India Issues of Social Justice SAGE Publications India pp 46 65 ISBN 978 81 321 0419 3 Archived from the original on 24 June 2021 Retrieved 22 January 2021 a b Omvedt Gail 1993 Reinventing Revolution New Social Movements and the Socialist Tradition in India M E Sharpe pp 58 59 ISBN 0 7656 3176 8 Archived from the original on 3 June 2021 Retrieved 16 June 2020 Fernando Franco ed 2002 Pain and Awakening The Dynamics of Dalit Identity in Bihar Gujarat and Uttar Pradesh Indian Social Institute ISBN 81 87218 46 0 Archived from the original on 24 April 2022 Retrieved 11 February 2021 Even as late as the 1970s the rape of lower caste women by Rajputs and Bhumihars had almost become a tradition an accepted social evil a fate which many bore unquestioningly in parts of central Bihar like in Bhojpur Amrik Singh Nimbran 1992 Poverty Land and Violence An Analytical Study of Naxalism in Bihar Layman s Publications Archived from the original on 4 August 2022 Retrieved 11 February 2021 For instance even till this day low caste labourers are not permitted to sit on charpoys outside their houses in the presence of Rajput or Bhumihar landlords Ram Nandu 2009 Beyond Ambedkar Essays on Dalits in India Har Anand Publications p 32 ISBN 978 81 241 1419 3 Archived from the original on 4 August 2022 Retrieved 16 June 2020 Ranabir Samaddar 2016 Government of Peace Social Governance Security and the Problematic of Peace Routledge pp 182 185 ISBN 978 1 317 12538 9 Archived from the original on 29 June 2021 Retrieved 14 December 2020 G S Bhalla 2007 Indian Agriculture Since Independence National Book Trust p 27 ISBN 978 81 237 4944 0 Archived from the original on 4 August 2022 Retrieved 11 February 2021 In States like Bihar Orissa Rajasthan Madhya Pradesh and West Bengal landlords managed to keep very large holdings because of their power and influence In general the level of success of Zamindari abolition depended on the strength of the peasant movement Some authors argue that many of the beneficiaries of the abolition of intermediaries former upper and middle caste tenants are now among those politically visible Kunnath George 2018 Rebels From the Mud Houses Dalits and the Making of the Maoist Revolution New york Taylor and Francis group p 38 ISBN 978 1 138 09955 5 Archived from the original on 4 August 2022 Retrieved 29 May 2020 However the greatest beneficiaries of the abolition of the zamindars and the introduction of the various land reform legislation in the 1950s were members of a substantial class of medium sized owner cultivators many of whom belonged to the upper layers of backward castes mostly the yadav kurmi koeri They gained additional land as a result of partitions transfers and sales of surplus land by zamindars It is estimated that during this period control over at least 10 percent of land passed into the hands of the middle peasantry from the landlords prasad1979 483 THE PATTERN OF ABUSE RURAL VIOLENCE IN BIHAR AND THE STATE S RESPONSE Human Rights Watch Archived from the original on 27 January 2021 Retrieved 27 January 2021 Rather than addressing the security needs of landless laborers most affected by the violence or provide protection to villagers at risk a series of inefficient and corrupt state governments since the early 1970s has only exacerbated the problem In many instances government officials many of whom are alleged to have caste ties or other affiliations with the senas have acted as agents of the private armies and have turned a blind eye to the killings State security forces have helped train the senas and in some cases police have accompanied the militias during their attacks on Dalit villages Police have also conducted their own raids on Dalit villages in the aftermath of massacres carried out by upper caste militias The ostensible reason for police raids has been to capture suspected Naxalites but the raids are frequently used to punish villagers suspected of sympathizing with the militant groups Like the attacks by private militias police raids have been characterized by violence looting and assaults on women The state s response to militant activity by Naxalite groups and by the senas is conspicuously uneven Sena members have rarely been prosecuted for acts of violence Police routinely detain and charge suspected Naxalite militants however and many are killed in so called encounters with the police Sinha A 2011 Nitish Kumar and the Rise of Bihar Viking pp 82 83 ISBN 978 0 670 08459 3 Archived from the original on 15 July 2020 Retrieved 7 April 2015 Arthur Bonner 1990 Averting the Apocalypse Social Movements in India Today Duke University Press p 201 ISBN 0 8223 1048 1 Archived from the original on 4 August 2022 Retrieved 29 March 2021 Peter Berger Frank Heidemann eds 2013 The Modern Anthropology of India Ethnography Themes and Theory Routledge p 34 ISBN 978 1 134 06111 2 Archived from the original on 18 May 2021 Retrieved 27 January 2021 Farzand Ahmed T N Ninan Massacre of 42 Rajputs in Bihar villages marks a new level of brutality India Today Archived from the original on 6 January 2021 Retrieved 9 August 2020 Kumar Nikhil 22 May 2016 29 years on here people still fear to tread The Times of India Archived from the original on 6 January 2021 Retrieved 9 August 2020 Nalin Verma Laloo Prasad Yadav 2019 Gopalganj to Raisina My Political Journey Rupa ISBN 978 93 5333 313 3 Archived from the original on 4 August 2022 Retrieved 30 July 2020 a b c Zarhani Seyed Hossein 2018 Elite agency and development in Bihar confrontation and populism in era of Garibon Ka Masiha Governance and Development in India A Comparative Study on Andhra Pradesh and Bihar after Liberalization Routledge ISBN 978 1 351 25518 9 Archived from the original on 4 August 2022 Retrieved 16 December 2020 Nambisan Vijay 2001 Bihar is in the Eye of the Beholder Penguin UK ISBN 93 5214 133 4 Archived from the original on 4 August 2022 Retrieved 26 July 2020 Phadnis Aditi 30 September 2013 Lalu Prasad Yadav From symbol of hope to ridicule Business Standard Archived from the original on 2 October 2013 Retrieved 1 October 2013 Shankar Kalyani 2005 Gods of Power Personality Cult amp Indian Democracy Macmillan pp 216 220 ISBN 1 4039 2510 0 Archived from the original on 4 August 2022 Retrieved 8 August 2020 Ahmed Soroor 18 January 2010 Upper caste politics at crucial juncture in Bihar The Bihar Times Archived from the 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the original on 10 February 2021 Retrieved 10 February 2021 Bihar election results 2015 1 in every 4 new members in Assembly is a Yadav Times of India 10 November 2015 Archived from the original on 10 February 2021 Retrieved 10 February 2021 a b In RLSP merger a Nitish message to BJP as he rebuilds Luv Kush alliance with Kushwaha ThePrint 14 March 2021 Archived from the original on 29 April 2021 Retrieved 15 March 2021 RLSP merges with JD U Kushwaha made chairman of party s parliamentary board Indian Express Archived from the original on 16 March 2021 Retrieved 14 March 2021 Bihar elections 2020 Six party front likely to hurt NDA and Grand Alliance The Economic Times 11 October 2020 Archived from the original on 11 December 2020 Retrieved 21 October 2020 Former MLA Umesh Kushwaha appointed Bihar JD U president Indian Express 11 January 2021 Archived from the original on 29 April 2021 Retrieved 14 March 2021 Prabhash K Dutta 16 November 2020 Nitish Kumar oath taking Who are Tarkishore Prasad and Renu Devi two deputy CM probables India Today Archived from the original on 4 August 2022 Retrieved 18 November 2020 Bihar fastest growing state Maharashtra tops in economic size Report dna 2 December 2015 Archived from the original on 15 July 2016 Retrieved 22 July 2016 Nitish Kumar s U turn he craves for crown and not coalition CNBCTV18 26 January 2024 Retrieved 3 February 2024 General bibliography edit Radhakanta Barik Land amp Caste Politics in Bihar Shipra Publications Delhi 2006 Jagannath Sarkar Many Streams Selected Essays by Jagannath Sarkar and Reminiscing Sketches Compiled by Gautam Sarkar Edited by Mitali Sarkar first published May 2010 Navakarnataka Publications Private Limited Bangalore Srivastava Sumit Saurabh EMERGENCE OF BACKWARD CASTE POLITICS IN BIHAR COALITION ALIGNMENT AND DOMINANCE The Indian Journal of Political Science vol 75 no 4 2014 pp 675 86 JSTOR https www jstor org stable 26575546 Accessed 26 Aug 2023 Rajkishor UNDERSTANDING THE POLITICS OF BIHAR THROUGH THE PRISM OF CASTE CLASS AND COMMUNITY FROM COLONIALISM TO POSTCOLONIALISM Proceedings of the Indian History Congress vol 77 2016 pp 539 45 JSTOR https www jstor org stable 26552681 Accessed 8 Sept 2023 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Politics of Bihar Official website Profile at the Government of India website Bihar CM official website Archived 26 February 2011 at the Wayback Machine caste statics and voting behavior in Bihar A former IAS officer reflects on the mess in Bihar Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Politics of Bihar amp oldid 1220243927, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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