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Rahul Gandhi's Bihar Yatra Ends in Disaster: Congress Trailing in All Seats on Campaign Route

Rahul Gandhi's Voter Adhikar Yatra, which covered a significant stretch of Bihar earlier this year, has failed to translate into electoral gains.

Rahul Gandhi Bihar Yatra
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Rahul Gandhi's Voter Adhikar Yatra, spanning 25 districts and 1,300 km in Bihar, failed to translate into electoral success for the Congress, with the party leading in only four seats out of 61. The NDA, including the BJP, JDU, and allies like LJP (Ram Vilas), secured a significant lead, while internal issues within the Congress and a lack of voter resonance hindered the campaign.

The Bihar election results have delivered a heavy blow to the Congress and raised deeper questions about the impact of Gandhi's campaign across the Gangetic belt.

Yatra Route Fails to Deliver a Single Seat

The journey started from Sasaram and concluded in Patna, cutting across 25 districts and covering approximately 1,300 km. Gandhi's team had hoped that his direct connect with voters would energise the party across the 110 constituencies on the route. Current counting trends show that none of these seats are swinging towards the Congress.

Out of the 61 seats the party contested, it is leading only in Valmiki Nagar, Kishanganj, Manihari, and Begusarai. This performance sharply contrasts with the Congress's confidence drawn from its success along the Bharat Jodo routes during the 2024 Lok Sabha and 2023 Telangana elections.

NDA Dominance and Collapse of Congress Messaging

The NDA has registered a sweeping lead across the state. The BJP is ahead in 91 constituencies and the JDU in 80, after both contested 101 each. Allies have also shown remarkable strength. Lok Janshakti Party (Ram Vilas) under Chirag Paswan is ahead in 22 of its 28 seats. Upendra Kushwaha's RLM leads in 3 of 6 seats and Jitan Ram Manjhi's HAM in 5 of 6.

These numbers signal that Gandhi's repeated warnings of "vote theft" did not resonate with Bihar's electorate. The Congress had framed the yatra as an effort to expose what it called a "BJP ploy to disenfranchise lakhs of voters in Bihar" through the Special Intensive Revision of the electoral rolls. Party leaders described the effort as a moral mission and a "big game-changer."

"This is a fight to protect the most symbolic democratic right - 'one person, one vote'," Gandhi had declared. The Election Commission dismissed his allegations as incorrect.

Leadership Rift, Weak Coordination, and Fading Momentum

Inside the Mahagathbandhan, multiple issues appear to have weakened the opposition's campaign. Congress leaders were hesitant to back Tejashwi Yadav as the joint chief ministerial face, creating visible cracks within the alliance. Coordination problems meant that even a unified narrative failed to reach voters in a coherent manner.

Though Gandhi's yatra initially energised party workers, the enthusiasm slowly evaporated as the campaign neared its final phase. Ground-level visibility dropped, and the lack of sustained mobilisation became apparent.

Additionally, friendly fights and internal factionalism between alliance partners contributed to mixed messaging and harmed both the Congress and the RJD at a crucial moment.

The Congress is yet to formally assess its defeat, but the results clearly show that Bihar's voters were not persuaded by its campaign or its allegations against the ruling coalition.

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