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​Turnout bump: On the Bihar Assembly elections, first phase Politics & News

​Turnout bump: On the Bihar Assembly elections, first phase Politics & News

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The first phase of Bihar’s Assembly elections on Thursday (November 6, 2025) witnessed a heartening democratic statistic — an impressive voter turnout across 121 constituencies. Provisional estimates have placed the figure at 64.69%, which may rise further as complete data emerge from all polling booths. These same constituencies have consistently recorded turnouts between 55.4% and 55.85% across the last four polls — Assembly and general elections. The nearly nine percentage point jump signals a reinvigorated engagement with the electoral process. The numbers reveal a more compelling story. Despite the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) process reducing registered electors from 3.88 crore in the 2024 general election to 3.73 crore now, the actual voter count surged from 2.15 crore to a provisional 2.42 crore. Predictably, the ruling coalition has rushed to attribute the surge to popular welfare schemes, framing it as pro-incumbency sentiment, while the Opposition has interpreted it as anti-incumbency fervour and a hunger for change. However, drawing definitive conclusions from turnout figures alone would be premature.

Academic studies have shown that there has been little correlation between increased voter participation and anti- or pro-incumbency in Assembly elections. But disaggregated data could offer insights. A spike in women’s participation might validate the impact of cash transfer schemes implemented on the eve of the elections by the Nitish Kumar-led government. Conversely, increased youth voting could reflect a yearning for change in a State where unemployment and large-scale migration remain persistent concerns. But the Election Commission of India (ECI) has not yet released gender-based turnout data, leaving such analysis in the realm of speculation. What seems indisputable is that the heightened discourse around the SIR process played a role. The Opposition’s Voter Adhikar Yatra and sustained focus on voter roll issues appear to have sensitised citizens about the sanctity of their franchise. A day before polling, the Leader of the Opposition in the Lok Sabha, Rahul Gandhi, raised concerns about electoral roll discrepancies in Haryana, alleging inadequate action by the ECI. Bihar’s first-phase turnout offers an instructive lesson: concerns about electoral processes are most effectively addressed not merely through criticism but by mobilising organisational machinery to educate and energise voters about registration and participation. The Congress and other Opposition parties would do well to channel their apprehensions about electoral integrity into systematic grassroots work that empowers citizens to claim their democratic rights — a strategy that could possibly yield tangible results at the ballot box while strengthening democratic institutions.

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​Turnout bump: On the Bihar Assembly elections, first phase

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