“Had a telephone conversation with Shri @NitishKumar & congratulated him on the victory,” Modi said on Twitter of his opponent, Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar.
Election Commission results showed Modi’s Hindu nationalist party leading in only 52 seats in the 243-seat state assembly compared to 158 for Kumar’s coalition of regional parties, as vote counting continues
Modi has mounted a no-holds barred campaign in Bihar, addressing some 30 rallies and promising voters billions of dollars for development in a state with some of India’s highest malnutrition and illiteracy levels.
#BiharDecides Leads @ 10.45am (241/243) JD(U)+ 146 BJP+ 88 LIVE updates: https://t.co/9t4GEZZT6t pic.twitter.com/liL01hABRB
— Times of India (@timesofindia) November 8, 2015
The election for the state assembly was seen as a critical test of Modi’s popularity after he stormed to power at national polls in May 2014 promising sweeping reforms to revive the faltering economy. Modi is up against an unlikely alliance of two powerful local leaders, Chief Minister Nitish Kumar and his predecessor Lalu Prasad Yadav, who has served time in prison for corruption.
JDU leader KC Tyagi celebrates after trends show Mahagatbandhan leading #BiharResults pic.twitter.com/PTFz3h3tjH
— ANI (@ANI_news) November 8, 2015
Ahead of counting, senior BJP leader Prakash Javadekar said the party was “absolutely sure of our win in Bihar”.
“Women have voted in large numbers. Poor want development and they have confidence in Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s leadership,” Javadekar, a minister in Modi’s government, told reporters.
As the contest tightened in recent weeks, the campaign shifted to bitter issues along religious and caste lines which have traditionally dominated the state of 100 million people.
Celebration outside RJD Office in Patna after trends now show Mahagathbandhan leading #BiharResults pic.twitter.com/Gg5jR8MLUo
— ANI (@ANI_news) November 8, 2015
Exit polls released last week showed the parties running neck and neck, after voting ended on Thursday in the election held in five phases over a month.
The BJP needs a win after suffering a humiliating defeat in February elections for the New Delhi state assembly to a fledgling anti-corruption party.
Assembly elections are important not only because state leaders wield significant power, but because parties gain seats in India’s upper house of parliament, where the BJP lacks a majority.
The campaign has been dogged by religious tensions after several Muslims were killed in separate incidents by Hindu mobs who suspected them of stealing or eating cows which Hindus consider sacred.