Bibhutipur Assembly Constituency 2025: Bibhutipur is a legislative assembly constituency in the Samastipur district of Bihar. As per delimitation (2008), it comprises the entire Bibhutipur community development block, plus several gram panchayats of the Dalsinghsarai CD Block (Bulakipur; Kamrawn; Malpur Purwaripatti; Rampur Jalalpur; Narhan Estate; Bambaiya Harlal; Ajnaul). The constituency is part of the Ujiarpur Lok Sabha constituency.
Geography, Voters and Local Issues
Geographically, it lies on fertile plains (Gangetic alluvium), with agriculture being the dominant economic activity. The Burhi Gandak River (and possibly other water channels) plays a significant role in the local ecosystem, irrigation, and thereby local livelihoods.
On the demographic front, while there is no official reservation (it’s a general seat) , the Kushwaha caste community is particularly influential; they are considered a decisive vote bloc. Voter turnout in past elections has been in the ~60-percent range (around 60.3-60.9 %) .
Local issues that tend to dominate include:
Rural distress: Agriculture productivity, irrigation, flood management (due to proximity to rivers), access to inputs.
Infrastructure: Roads, electrification, potable water.
Social services: Health, schooling, public transport.
Caste alignments and representation: Having candidates who belong to major local castes (especially Kushwaha) tends to matter.
Bibhutipur Assembly Constituency 2025: Recent Political History
Bibhutipur has seen a mix of political currents in recent decades. The Communist Party of India (Marxist) (CPI(M)) has been one of the strongest players here. In the 2020 assembly elections, Ajay Kumar of CPI(M) won the seat, defeating Ram Balak Singh of JD(U) by a large margin (~ 40,496 votes).
In 2015, Ram Balak Singh (JD(U)) had won this seat. Before that and over many past terms, Ramdeo Verma (CPI(M)) had a strong presence: he represented Bibhutipur for multiple terms (1990-2010), except for some interruptions.
Thus, the seat has oscillated between the Left (CPI(M)) and JD(U), with occasional influence of other parties (e.g. Lok Janshakti Party) but often in a three-way contest. The voter base seems fairly stable, but margins can shift depending on the candidate, alliance, and local issues.
Election Numbers (2010–2020)
Over the elections from 2010 to 2020, a few patterns emerge in Bibhutipur:
2010: Ram Balak Singh (JD(U)) won. (Precise vote share/margins differ across sources but he had held the seat earlier, too.)
2015: Again, Ram Balak Singh of JD(U) won; vote share around 39.76 %. CPI(M)’s Ramdeo Verma came second; LJP also had a significant vote share (~22 %).
2020: Ajay Kumar (CPI(M)) won with ~45.00 % vote share; the margin was around 40,496 votes over Ram Balak Singh.
Voter turnout in 2015 was ~ 60.36 %, in 2020 ~ 60.89 %.
Bibhutipur Assembly Constituency 2025: Past Complete Winners List
1967: P. S. Madan, Communist Party of India (CPI)
1969: Ganga Prasad Srivastava, Samyukta Socialist Party
1972: Bandhu Mahto, Indian National Congress
1977: [Data scarce / not clearly listed in our sources]
1980: Ramdeo Verma, CPI(M)
1985: Chandrabali Thakur, Indian National Congress
1990: Ramdeo Verma, CPI(M)
2010: Ram Balak Singh, Janata Dal (United)
2015: Ram Balak Singh, JD(U)
2020: Ajay Kumar, CPI(M)
Bibhutipur Assembly Elections 2025 Voting Date
The Bibhutipur seat in the Bihar Assembly Election was voted on November 6, 2025.
Bibhutipur Assembly Elections 2025 Result Date
The Election Commission of India (ECI) has set 14.11.2025 as the date of results for the Bibhutipur constituency, along with the polling result of all Bihar Assembly seats.
Bibhutipur Assembly Elections 2025 Candidates List
| Party | Candidate Name |
|---|---|
| AAP | Arvind Kumar |
| BSP | Awadhesh Kumar |
| CPI(M) | Ajay Kumar |
| JD(U) | Ravina Kushwaha |
| Jan Suraaj Party | Vishwanath Choudhary |
| Janshakti Janta Dal | Neel Kamal |
| INDEPENDENT | Amarjeet Kumar, Kanhaiya Kumar, Navin Kumar, Prahlad, Ram Lal Tanti, Rupanjali Kumari, Shashi Bhushan Das, Sushant Kumar |
Delhi Assembly Election Results 2025: Constituency-wise Winning and Losing Candidates List
What to Watch During the 2025 Contest?
1. Kushwaha Voter Mobilization: Since the Kushwaha community is a dominant vote bloc in Bibhutipur, how parties manage to attract, unify or split that vote will matter.
2. Alliance Formations and Seat Sharing: In the previous elections, there were instances of multi-way contests (JD(U), LJP, CPI(M), etc.). In such a scenario, the question of whether there is a strong, coherent alliance (e.g. NDA vs INDIA/Mahagathbandhan plus Left) will impact vote splitting, particularly for non-Left parties.
3. Incumbent’s Performance vs Local Grievances: The performance of Ajay Kumar (CPI(M)) as an incumbent on issues like support, irrigation, flood/farm loss, infrastructure, etc. will undoubtedly be questioned.
4. Third Party / Minor Candidate Impact: The involvement of smaller parties or independent candidates may have considerable significance in changing the margins. Just to illustrate, LJP got nontrivial votes (~17.5 %) and a few independents also attracted some votes apart from the top two in 2020.
5. Voter Turnout & Youth/New Voters: The turnout has been fairly consistent at about 60 %. However, a surge of first-time voters, better mobilization in hard-to-reach or neglected areas, weather/flooding, and other similar factors could lead to the margins being altered.












