Muzaffarpur: Rama Nishad, handed a BJP ticket in place of sitting MLA and former minister Ram Surat Rai, has secured a decisive victory in Muzaffarpur’s Aurai seat, ending weeks of internal discord and speculation. The decision to drop Rai had sparked discontent within local party ranks, but intervention by senior leaders helped steady the organisation before polling.
Much of the unrest stemmed from public anger directed at Nishad’s husband, Ajay Nishad, who had quit the BJP during the 2024 Lok Sabha elections after being denied a ticket. He contested against Congress’s Rajbhushan Chaudhary but suffered defeat. Ahead of the assembly polls, however, he returned to the BJP fold and played a key role in ensuring his wife’s nomination.
A long political arc and a familiar name in Muzaffarpur
Rama Nishad is no newcomer to public life. A five-time MP from Muzaffarpur, she has travelled across party lines — from alliances with Lalu Prasad Yadav and Nitish Kumar to eventually joining the BJP. Before entering state-level politics, she served as chairperson of the Hajipur Nagar Parishad, earning a reputation as a grounded and accessible local leader.
Her political identity has long been intertwined with her family’s appeal. Beyond electoral success, she is regarded as an “ideal wife and ideal daughter-in-law”, a cultural image that continues to resonate among a section of her supporters.
Caste calculus and representation
Nishad belongs to the Mallah community, a group with significant electoral weight in northern Bihar. Her rise fits neatly into the social inclusion strategy of the new Nitish Kumar-led government, which has sought to broaden caste representation in ministerial appointments. Her sweeping victory has strengthened expectations that she will be inducted into the state cabinet.
Mandate for experience, popularity and identity
The Nishad family’s political resurgence, coupled with Rama Nishad’s substantial winning margin, has underscored the complexity of Bihar’s electoral terrain — where experience, community identity and personal credibility intersect to determine victory.





















