Kaimur: In a landmark result that has redrawn Bihar’s political map, the Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) has claimed its first victory in the state assembly, with Satish Kumar Singh Yadav winning the fiercely contested Ramgarh seat by a margin so slender it kept the state on edge overnight.
The result – a thrilling win by just 30 votes – has given the BSP an unprecedented foothold in a state where it has long remained peripheral.
A night of suspense in Ramgarh
Yadav secured 72,689 votes, narrowly defeating the BJP’s Ashok Kumar Singh, who finished with 72,659. Counting swung both ways through the night as rounds alternated between the BJP and BSP, before Yadav edged ahead in the final stretch to “script history,” as party workers described it.
Political observers say the ultra-tight finish is among the rarest margins in Bihar’s electoral history.
The Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD) candidate, Ajit Kumar, trailed far behind in third place with 41,480 votes, underlining how the contest had effectively polarised between the BSP and BJP.
Smaller parties trail as NOTA surprises
Among other candidates, the Jan Suraaj Party’s Anand Kumar Singh secured 4,426 votes, while the Suheldev Bharatiya Samaj Party’s Ghurelal Rajbhar received 1,779. Independent Rampravesh Singh managed only 657.
NOTA registered 1,154 votes, reflecting simmering voter dissatisfaction in pockets of the constituency.
A turning point for BSP in Bihar
Though just one seat, the Ramgarh result represents a strategic and psychological leap for the BSP in Bihar, where the party has historically struggled to influence state-level politics. Yadav’s win, analysts argue, has spotlighted the Dalit–OBC–minority alliance the BSP has been quietly cultivating.
“The result signals that localised caste equations, strong booth management and targeted messaging have worked for the BSP,” said a Patna-based political analyst. The BJP’s narrow defeat, they added, shows that even dominant parties remain vulnerable where smaller parties mobilise efficiently.
A contest that could shape future equations
Beyond the numbers, Ramgarh has emerged as the election’s most dramatic battleground, triggering speculation about whether the BSP could expand its presence in upcoming cycles.





















