LJP (Ram Vilas) Passes 8 Proposals: To Contest All 243 Seats in 2025, Push for National Party Status

LJP (Ram Vilas) passed eight resolutions focused on social justice and organisational expansion, declaring its intent to contest all 243 Bihar Assembly seats in 2025 and seek national party status.

LJP (Ram Vilas) Passes 8 Proposals: To Contest All 243 Seats in 2025, Push for National Party Status

Patna: The Lok Janshakti Party (Ram Vilas) passed eight key resolutions during its executive meeting on Thursday, signalling its intent to expand organisational strength across Bihar and pursue national party status under the leadership of Chirag Paswan.

The meeting, held under the chairmanship of party state president Raju Tiwari and MP Arun Bharti, focused on mobilising support across all 243 assembly constituencies in the run-up to the 2025 Bihar Assembly elections.

The first and central resolution passed was to work towards securing national party recognition for LJP (Ram Vilas), a responsibility formally assigned to MP Arun Bharti. The party also passed a resolution expressing concern over rising crimes against the Bahujan Samaj and committed to launching a grassroots struggle against the systemic deprivation of marginalised communities from public welfare schemes.

LJP (Ram Vilas) Passes 8 Proposals: To Contest All 243 Seats in 2025, Push for National Party Status

Another resolution criticised the reduction and delay in disbursing scholarships for Bahujan students, calling it discriminatory and demanding corrective action. A separate resolution affirmed the party’s commitment to fighting for the rights and dignity of the Mahadalit community.

Among the political strategies outlined, the party resolved to contest all 243 seats in the 2025 Bihar Assembly elections with “comprehensive preparation and decisive presence.” The executive also passed a thanksgiving resolution marking the successful organisation of the Nav Sankalp Mahasabha in Shahabad and approved the upcoming Bahujan Bhim Sankalp Samagam to consolidate its core voter base.