Bihar Election Exit Poll: NDA's Narrow Edge Amid Tejashwi's RJD Surge

The latest exit poll from Axis My India shows a tight race in Bihar's assembly elections. While the NDA is projected to form the government, their victory margin appears quite narrow. Interestingly, Tejashwi Yadav's RJD is expected to emerge as the single largest party despite the Mahagathbandhan trailing overall. This projection contrasts with other pollsters who predicted a clearer NDA victory.

Key Points: Axis My India Exit Poll Predicts NDA Win in Bihar Elections

  • NDA projected to win 121-140 seats with 43% vote share
  • RJD emerges as single largest party with 67-76 seats
  • Mahagathbandhan trails with 98-118 seats and 41% vote share
  • Prashant Kishor's Jan Suraaj expected to win 0-2 seats only
2 min read

Close contest in Bihar but NDA to have edge over Mahagathbandhan, predicts Axis My India's Exit poll

Axis My India exit poll predicts NDA winning 121-140 seats in Bihar, with RJD emerging as single largest party despite Mahagathbandhan trailing in vote share.

"The highlight of the Exit polls is Tejashwi Yadav-led RJD emerging as the single largest party - Axis My India"

New Delhi, Nov 12

The ruling National Democratic Alliance (NDA) is set to return to power in Bihar but with a slender margin over the RJD-Congress-led Mahagathbandhan (MGB), Axis My India forecasted in its Exit poll on Wednesday.

The leading polling agency has predicted that the NDA under Nitish Kumar will win between 121 and 140 seats, Mahagathbandhan could secure victory in 98-118, while the Prashant Kishor-led Jan Suraaj Party is expected to end up between 0-2 seats in the 243-member Assembly.

According to Axis My India Exit poll projections, the NDA is likely to garner 43 per cent vote share while the MGB is seen settling for a 2 per cent lower vote share at 41 per cent.

The highlight of the Exit polls is Tejashwi Yadav-led RJD emerging as the single largest party in the high-stakes Assembly elections with 67-76 seats on its own, effectively registering a strike rate of over 50 per cent.

Both BJP and JD(U) are seen bagging 18 per cent vote share each, while Chirag Paswan-led LJP (RV), Jitan Ram Manjhi-led HAM and Upendra Kushwaha-led RLM are expected to fetch 5 per cent, 1-1 per cent vote share each.

In the MGB bloc, RJD is seen securing 24 per cent vote share, Congress 10 per cent and Mukesh Sahani-led VIP 2 per cent votes. The left parties with CPI(ML), CPI and CPI (M) taken together will fetch 5 per cent votes.

Jan Suraaj is expected to command 4 per cent vote share while Asaduddin Owaisi-led AIMIM could claim over 1 per cent votes, thereby belying wide expectations that the huge voter turnout was a mandate against the incumbent Nitish Kumar government.

The projections by Axis My India stand in contrast with other pollsters, as most of them gave a clear and decisive lead to the ruling NDA and a big setback for the grand alliance.

For the ‘newbie’ Jan Suraaj, Axis My India’s predictions remain on similar grounds with other pollsters as the party, which became the talking point of the Bihar elections, is expected to stay at the bottom with likely victory in 0-2 seats.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Interesting that RJD might emerge as single largest party even if NDA wins. Tejashwi Yadav seems to have really connected with youth voters this time. Development vs social justice - classic Bihar dilemma!
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Aman W
Nitish Kumar's experience and BJP's organizational strength should see them through. But the narrow margin shows people want better governance and employment opportunities. Hope whoever wins delivers on promises 🤞
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Sarah B
As someone following Indian politics, I find it fascinating how Axis My India's prediction differs from others. The 2% vote share difference could make all the difference in seat distribution. Very tight contest indeed!
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Nikhil C
Disappointing that Prashant Kishor's Jan Suraaj couldn't make a bigger impact. Had high hopes for a new alternative in Bihar politics. Maybe next time! 🙏
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Meera T
The high voter turnout was supposed to be anti-incumbency, but exit polls suggest otherwise. Bihar politics always has surprises! Whatever the result, hope development work continues without disruption.

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