Patna: The BJP on Wednesday announced Samrat Chaudhary as the leader of its Legislature Party in Bihar, with Vijay Sinha named his deputy—an appointment hailed within party ranks as a decisive organisational shift ahead of the new government’s formation. The decision, made at a meeting at the party’s state headquarters, effectively confirms Chaudhary and Sinha as the BJP’s choices for the two deputy chief ministerial positions in the next cabinet.
The announcement sparked visible enthusiasm among party workers, many of whom described the appointments as a signal that the BJP intends to assert a stronger and more central role in Bihar’s administration this term.
Senior BJP MLA Prem Kumar proposed the names of Chaudhary and Sinha, supported by a group of prominent leaders including Ram Kripal Yadav, Krishna Kumar Rishi, Sangeeta Kumari, Arun Shankar Prasad, Mithilesh Tiwari, Nitin Naveen, Virendra Kumar, Rama Nishad, Manoj Sharma and Krishna Kumar Mantoo.
A leadership chosen with caste balance in mind
Party insiders suggest the selection reflects a calculated strategy: Bihar’s caste matrix remains central to any stable administration, and the appointments are widely viewed as preserving that delicate equilibrium.
The BJP’s sweeping victory in the recent elections was shaped by a broad consolidation of caste groups behind the party. The new leadership formula—described internally as “experience with equilibrium”—is designed to maintain this coalition and prepare the party for long-term governance stability.
Signals of cabinet stability and return of experienced faces
By reassigning the same top faces to leadership positions, the BJP appears intent on projecting continuity, maturity and administrative competence. Senior MLAs with long organisational and governmental experience are expected to return to the cabinet, reinforcing a sense of stability at a time of political transition.
Party officials indicated that the expansion of the new cabinet will prioritise inclusive representation—from Dalit, OBC, EBC and upper-caste communities—ensuring no section feels marginalised in the incoming government.
Towards a new political chapter
The BJP’s internal message is clear: no experimental politics, no sudden shifts, but a government built on “steady hands and wider social inclusion”. With the swearing-in set for Thursday, the party is preparing for what it describes as the beginning of a new political chapter, anchored in stronger BJP leadership within the NDA framework.




















