RSP Set for Two-Thirds Majority in Nepal, Modi Congratulates Leaders

The Rastriya Swatantra Party (RSP) maintains a commanding lead in Nepal's parliamentary elections, having secured 125 seats in the First-Past-the-Post category. With vote counting nearly complete, the party is projected to win around 60 more seats via proportional representation, giving it roughly 185 seats in the 275-member House—enough for a two-thirds majority. A result in one constituency, Dhanusha-1, is delayed due to a dispute over votes for a disqualified RSP candidate. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi congratulated RSP leaders, expressing confidence that bilateral ties will strengthen under the new government.

Key Points: Nepal Election: RSP Leads Vote Count, Set for Majority

  • RSP leads FPTP with 125 seats
  • Projected to win 185 seats total
  • Needs 184 for two-thirds majority
  • Only 5 parties likely to cross PR threshold
3 min read

Balen affiliated RSP maintains lead in Nepal's parliamentary vote count, final results expected next week

Rastriya Swatantra Party leads Nepal's parliamentary vote, projected to secure two-thirds majority. PM Modi congratulates RSP leaders.

"I am confident that with our joint endeavours, India and Nepal relations will scale new heights - Narendra Modi"

Kathmandu, March 10

The Rastriya Swatantra Party has continued to maintain lead in the parliamentary vote count while it secures 125 seats under the First-Past-the-Post category. The newly formed party to which former Kathmandu Mayor and Rapper Balendra Shah is affiliated is leading the Proportionate Representation category as well.

With counting completed in 164 out of the total 165 constituencies, RSP has won 125 seats while the Nepali Congress has secured 18 seats and the CPN-UML has won nine constituencies. The Nepali Communist Party has secured seven seats under the FPTP category.

Under the proportional representation vote count so far, the RSP has secured 4,967, 043 votes. The Nepali Congress has garnered 1, 684, 175 votes in the proportional category, while the CPN-UML has secured 1, 400, 247 votes.

The Nepali Communist Party has received 7,61,680 votes under the proportional system.

In the House of Representatives election, political parties must secure at least 3 per cent of the total PR votes to qualify for seats under the proportional representation system. Based on the current vote count, only RSP, Nepali Congress, CPN-UML, NCP and RPP appear likely to cross the threshold.

If the vote share remains unchanged until the final count, the RSP is projected to win around 60 seats under the PR system. Similarly, the Nepali Congress may secure 20 seats, the CPN-UML 17 seats, the Maoist Centre eight seats, and the RPP five seats.

Adding the projected 60 PR seats, the RSP could secure around 185 seats in the 275-member House of Representatives.

A party needs 184 seats to command a two-thirds majority in the House. If the current voting trend continues, the RSP appears on course to secure that threshold.

Meanwhile, the vote counting result in Dhanusha-1 has been deferred following a dispute over whether to validate votes cast for RSP candidate Kishori Shah.

The Election Commission had declared Shah disqualified for the election two days before polling day, citing claims regarding his eligibility. The dispute over the validity of votes cast in his favour has delayed the final declaration of the result in the constituency.

On Monday evening, Prime Minister Narendra Modi congratulated leaders of Nepal's Rastriya Swatantra Party (RSP) on their electoral victory in the country's national polls and expressed confidence that the bilateral ties will scale new heights with joint endeavours of the leaders of the two countries.

In a post on X, PM Modi said he had a warm telephone conversation with Rabi Lamichhane, chairman of the Rastriya Swatantra Party (RSP) and Balendra Shah, senior leader of the RSP.

PM Modi also conveyed his best wishes to the leaders for the formation of the new government in Nepal and reiterated India's willingness to work closely with the incoming leadership.

"Congratulated both leaders on their electoral victories and RSP's resounding success in the Nepal elections. Conveyed my best wishes for their forthcoming new Government and India's commitment to work with them for mutual prosperity, progress and well-being of our two countries," he said.

"I am confident that with our joint endeavours, India and Nepal relations will scale new heights in the years ahead," he added.

On March 5, voters cast their ballots to elect 165 candidates under the First-Past-the-Post (FPTP) category and for 110 seats under the Proportional Representation (PR) category.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
PM Modi's quick congratulations is a good diplomatic move. Strong and stable leadership in Nepal is in India's interest too, especially for cross-border projects and trade. Hope the new government addresses the concerns of the Madhesi community as well.
A
Aman W
The sheer scale of the lead is unbelievable! 125 FPTP seats out of 164 counted? This is a political earthquake. Balen Shah has truly captured the public's imagination. Let's see if they can deliver on their promises now.
S
Sarah B
While the victory seems decisive, the article mentions a dispute in Dhanusha-1. It's crucial that the Election Commission resolves this transparently. The legitimacy of the entire process depends on handling such issues fairly.
V
Vikram M
As an Indian, I'm cautiously optimistic. A stable Nepal means a secure border and better cooperation. But we must also be prepared to engage with a government that might have a very different, perhaps more nationalist, outlook compared to the old parties. The "joint endeavours" PM Modi mentioned will be key.
K
Kavya N
The complete rejection of traditional parties like Nepali Congress and UML is the big story here. People are tired of the same old faces and politics. Hope this brings fresh ideas and accountability to Kathmandu. Good luck to them!

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