City
Epaper

Analysis shows female voter turnout had mixed impact in Bihar, BJP not sole beneficiary

By IANS | Updated: November 20, 2025 20:30 IST

Patna, Nov 20 An in-depth analysis of the voting patterns in the just-concluded Bihar Assembly elections has shown ...

Open in App

Patna, Nov 20 An in-depth analysis of the voting patterns in the just-concluded Bihar Assembly elections has shown that the SIR – which was vilified by the Opposition parties - or the voting percentages had “no impact” on the result, an analyst said on Thursday.

The latest findings of political observers and psephologists also bust the myth that higher female voter percentages in the elections benefited the BJP alone, and the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls queered the pitch only for the Congress and Rashtriya Janata Dal-led Mahagathbandhan.

Data representing the top five Assembly constituencies – out of 243 - with the highest female polling percentage demonstrated that “higher female voter percentages resulted in mixed results. Not in favour of BJP alone,” said an election data analyst.

Of the five constituencies that recorded the highest female polling percentage, the BJP won only one seat of Pranpur (AC 66), said the analyst.

The other four constituencies where female polling percentage was the highest are: Thakurganj (AC 53), which was won by the Janata Dal (United); Kochadhaman (AC 55), won by All India Majlis-e-Ittehadul Muslimeen (AIMIM); Baisi (AC 57), won by AIMIM; and Amour (AC 56), won by AIMIM.

The analysis shows that the AIMIM won three and the BJP and the JD (U) won one seat each out of the five constituencies, which recorded the highest female polling percentage in the Bihar Assembly elections on 243 seats.

The female polling percentage was the highest in Thakurganj (90.27 per cent), Kochadhaman (89.22 per cent), Pranpur (88.99 per cent), Baisi (88.89) and Amour (88.09), according to data from the Election Commission of India (ECI).

In fact, the BJP managed to win all five constituencies where the female polling percentage was the lowest among the 243 seats. These seats included: Kumhrar (AC 183), Bankipur (AC 182), Digha (AC 181), Biharsharif (AC 172) and Bhagalpur (AC 156).

The lowest female polling percentage was recorded in Kumhrar (39.13 per cent).

An analyst said, “The ECI data demonstrates that higher female voter percentages resulted in mixed results. Not in favour of BJP alone.”

“There is no impact of SIR or voting percentages on the outcome of elections in Bihar. The electors had their way. They chose whomever they wanted,” said the expert.

The election was

--IANS

rch/dan

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalNot going to give up options: Trump again says US needs Greenland for national security

BusinessReliance Industrial Infrastructure Q3 FY26 profit rises 9.9% YoY to Rs 3.01 crore

InternationalIran Shuts Airspace to Commercial Flights Amid Tensions With US; Air India and IndiGo Issue Advisories

InternationalUS launches phase two of Gaza peace plan, announces technocratic rule

InternationalPakistan hit with major setback as US halts immigrant visas for nationals of 75 countries

National Realted Stories

NationalArmy Day parade breaks tradition as Jaipur hosts first-ever public route spectacle

NationalSC to hear today ED plea against CM Mamata Banerjee over I-PAC row

NationalMaharashtra votes today in high-stakes polls across 29 civic bodies

NationalPM Modi to inaugurate 28th Commonwealth Speakers’ Conference today

NationalBRS MLA booked for objectionable remarks against Telangana CM