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          Patna/New Delhi, Nov 24 (IANS) Bihar Chief Minister Nitish   Kumar Wednesday steered the National Democratic Alliance (NDA) to a historic   electoral triumph bagging nearly 85 percent of the seats and decimating the Lalu   Prasad-led opposition while virtually erasing the Congress from one of India's   most populous states.   
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	  In a verdict that left even experts groping for words,   Bihar's ruling Janata Dal-United (JD-U)-Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) alliance   rode to victory on its development plank and was projected to win an incredible   206 of the 243 assembly seats. While the JD-U was projected to win 115, the BJP tally was 91.
 The   Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD)-Lok Janshakti Party (LJP) combine led by Lalu Prasad   and Ram Vilas Paswan, considered kingmakers until just a few years ago, was   trailing far behind at number two with 25 seats.
 
 And the Congress, which   rules the country and contested all 243 seats, was left lagging at a humiliating   third with a dismal four seats, less than even the nine it mustered in the 2005   poll.
 
 Emphatic, resounding, decisive… many adjectives did the rounds as   analysts and politicians attempted to grasp the extent of the poll victory that   has propelled JD-U chief Nitish Kumar to a second term of governing the state of   83 million.
 
 The trends were seen right from 8 a.m. when counting began of   the 28 millions votes polled from Oct 21 to Nov 20. It was largely seen as a   victory of development versus the regressive politics of caste that had for long   dominated the state, considered one of the poorest and most   backward.
 
 Stating that development had won in Bihar, Nitish Kumar, whose   past is rooted in the country's now virtually defunct socialist movement, said   people wanted to put the state on the path of progress and pointed out that this   election had seen more women voters than men.
 
 "Bat banane ka daur khatam   ho gaya hai (The time to talk has ended)," he said, adding that those who fought   the election on the basis of caste had been defeated.
 
 "Logon mein jagriti   ayee hai, woh apni kahani likhega. Yeh chunao ne nayee kahani likhi hai. (People   have awakened, this will write its own story. This election has written a new   story)," the toast of Bihar said.
 
 Although both the JD-U and BJP, who   have been aligned since 1996, made substantial gains over their 2005 strength,   leaders of both credited the win largely to the charisma of Nitish   Kumar.
 
 As wild celebrations broke out in the JD-U and BJP headquarters in   Delhi and Patna, BJP leaders stepped out one by one to hail the victory - Sushma   Swaraj, Arun Jaitley, Ravi Shankar Prasad, Prakash Javadekar.
 
 "I   congratulate the people of Bihar for showing extreme maturity," Jaitley   said.
 
 "It marks a new signal in Indian polity. It is a victory of   meritorious leadership over dynastic politics," he said, taking a swipe at the   Congress, which fielded its president Sonia Gandhi and general secretary Rahul   Gandhi for campaigning in the six-phase elections.
 
 "We didn't have much   hope," Sonia Gandhi admitted while talking to reporters outside her residence.   "The results indicate that our party has to start from scratch and that is what   we plan to do."
 
 Her colleague Home Minister P. Chidambaram added while   congratulating Nitish Kumar for the "great show" that the "development argument   has prevailed".
 
 "We wish them the best for running a progressive and   forward looking government," Chidambaram said.
 
 Smarting under the   humiliating defeat that saw his wife and former chief minister Rabri Devi routed   as well as his brothers-in-law, RJD chief Lalu Prasad congratulated long-time   rival but not the BJP as he "hates" it for its communal views.
 
 As the   political world wrote his political epitaph, he said: "We are not discouraged,   we will do our duty as the opposition."
 
 In political analyst G.V.L.   Narasimha Rao's views, this election result showed that "leadership and   development were becoming crucial factors" while caste and other such factors   were becoming less prominent.
 
 "There are many elections which resulted in   this kind of outcome," Rao told IANS, adding that it was very unusual for the   Hindi heartland though not so in places like Tamil Nadu and Kerala.
 
 While   analysts debated, there was also a groundswell of support for events back home   from the many migrant workers and youngsters who left home for better   opportunities. Maybe this was the gamechanger that would ensure that their state   was no longer 'BIMARU', they hoped.
 
 
   
      
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