NEW DELHI: Counting of votes in the Supaul Assembly constituency will begin at 8:00am today, with the spotlight on JD(U) heavyweight Bijendra Prasad Yadav, who is seeking to retain the seat for a third consecutive term. He faces a triangular contest against Congress’s Minnatullah Rahmani and Jan Suraj’s Anil Singh, in a region where caste alignments and rural priorities have long shaped electoral outcomes. The contest this year comes against the backdrop of complex caste arithmetic, a predominantly rural electorate, and the continuing influence of agrarian and livelihood issues.Located in Supaul district, the constituency falls under the Supaul parliamentary seat, which comprises five assembly segments.
Election Results 2025
Classified as a general category seat, it has long been a key political ground for Yadav, one of JD(U)’s senior-most leaders and a cabinet minister in the state government.
| Candidates | Party | Votes polled | Voter percentage |
| Bijendra Prasad Yadav | BJP | ||
| Minnatullah Rahmani | INC | ||
| Anil Singh | JS | ||
| Margin of difference |
Supaul had 2,97,943 registered voters and 392 polling booths in the 2020 Bihar Assembly election. During the 2024 Lok Sabha polls, the number of polling booths was revised to 320. Voter participation has remained steady over the years – 56.71% in 2020, 58.09 per cent in 2015, and 60.05 per cent in the 2019 parliamentary election. The constituency’s diverse voter base – with a significant presence of Muslims, Scheduled Castes (SC) and Extremely Backward Classes (EBCs) – continues to shape its political outcomes. Muslims make up a considerable share of the electorate, making their support decisive for any candidate.In 2020, Bijendra Prasad Yadav (JD(U)) defeated Minnatullah Rahmani (INC) by a comfortable margin of about 28,000 votes. Yadav secured 86,174 votes (50.2 per cent), while Rahmani polled 58,075 (33.8 per cent). Five years earlier, in 2015, Yadav had won with 82,295 votes (54.7 per cent), defeating Congress’s Renuka Devi, who garnered around 44,898 votes. With the JD(U) hoping to maintain its stronghold and the opposition banking on local anti-incumbency, early trends from Supaul will offer a glimpse into north Bihar’s rural mood and the social coalition dynamics driving this election season.
