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Nitish Kumar’s JD (U) wins its first Manipur seat in 22 years, leads on 4 more

The Janata Dal (United) last won a seat in the Manipur assembly in the 2000 state elections but has since then, drawn a blank. This time, the JD (U) fielded over a dozen sitting and former legislators inducted from the BJP and Congress.

Updated on: Mar 10, 2022, 14:17:45 IST
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GUWAHATI: Bihar chief minister Nitish Kumar’s Janata Dal (United) on Thursday recorded its first win in Manipur in 22 years and is leading on four more seats.

Manipur election result: Bihar chief minister Nitish Kumar’s Janata Dal United has won one seat and is leading on four seats in the Manipur assembly elections. (HT File Photo/Santosh Kumar)
Manipur election result: Bihar chief minister Nitish Kumar’s Janata Dal United has won one seat and is leading on four seats in the Manipur assembly elections. (HT File Photo/Santosh Kumar)

Ngusanglur Sanate, the JD (U) candidate from Tipaimukh constituency in Churachandpur district, won the seat with a 49% vote share, or 6,267 votes, defeating the Bharatiya Janata Party’s Chalton Lien Amo who secured 5018 votes and 39% valid votes. The BJP inducted Chalton Lien Amo from the Congress in January this year but he could not retain his seat.

Though the JD (U) primarily has a support base in Bihar, the party isn’t entirely new to politics in the northeast. The party did win one seat in the state in the 2000 assembly polls in Manipur. But it has failed to replicate that success in successive elections in Manipur. In the 2017 elections, it didn’t field any candidate in Manpur.

In neighbouring Nagaland, the party won three seats in 2003 and won one seat in 2013. In 2018, the JD (U) won one seat, but the MLA, who was a minister in the state government, switched over to the ruling Nationalist Democratic Political Party (NDPP), which is supported by Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).

The party had won seven of the 15 seats it had contested in the Arunachal Pradesh assembly polls in 2019 becoming the second largest party after the BJP, which secured 41 seats. But in 2020, six of the seven JD (U) MLAs switched sides to the ruling BJP.

This time, the JD (U) fielded candidates on 38 of the state assembly’s 60 seats, including a dozen sitting and former legislators from the BJP and Congress.

Former Manipur police chief LM Khaute, who switched to JD (U) after failing to get a ticket from BJP, is leading in Churachandpur. Md Ashabuddin, who won as an Independent in 2017, and is contesting on a JD (U) ticket from Jiribam is also leading. The JD (U) candidate from Lilong, Md Abdul Nasir, and Kh Joykishan Singh from Thangmeiband, are also leading.

  • Utpal Parashar
    ABOUT THE AUTHOR
    Utpal Parashar

    A seasoned senior journalist, I have nearly three decades of experience across print, digital, and online platforms, covering political transitions, insurgencies, environmental issues, and development stories in India and Nepal. I am skilled in breaking news, leading editorial teams and launch of newspaper editions. I am adept at leveraging digital trends and social media to expand global reach, with a strong ethical foundation and a reputation for impactful journalism. An alumnus of Asian College of Journalism, I joined Hindustan Times in New Delhi as a trainee reporter in May 1997. Over the years, I have been posted in Dehradun, Kathmandu (Nepal) and Guwahati. Currently, as Senior Assistant Editor at Hindustan Times, I lead a team reporting on India’s northeastern states. My work involves in-depth analysis, and engaging multimedia storytelling across formats, including text, photo, video, and interactive content. I am skilled in producing timely, shareable content, leveraging digital platforms and social media to engage global audiences. Throughout my career with the Hindustan Times, I have led diverse editorial teams, designed capacity-building activities, and supported reporters in developing strong story ideas, ethical reporting practices, digital skills, and fact-checking techniques. As Senior Assistant Editor for Northeast India, I have been responsible for guiding correspondents through complex political, humanitarian, and community-level stories using multimedia formats. Earlier, as Foreign Correspondent in Nepal, I produced extensive reporting during Nepal’s democratic transition and the 2015 earthquake and its aftermath.Read More