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Nitish takes oath for 10th time

His first significant breakthrough came in 2000 with a short stint as Chief Minister

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Nitish takes oath for 10th time
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21 Nov 2025 12:33 PM IST

Patna: “I, Nitish Kumar…” At 11:35 a.m. on Thursday, November 20, the naysayers silently watched him take the oath of office and secrecy for the 10th time as the Chief Minister of Bihar. Till then, there was a chorus of doubts that the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) would not allow the 74-year-old leader of the Janata Dal (U) to lead the National Democratic Alliance (NDA) state government “this time”.

A similar doubt was sown in 2020 before Nitish Kumar swore in as the head of the state government, with a mask underscoring the first such democratic process held in India in the aftermath of the Covid pandemic. However, whether the JD (U) got 43 seats (in the 2020 Assembly election) or 85 (in 2025), whether the ally returned to the Bihar Legislative Assembly as the single third - or the second-largest party, the BJP abided by its pledge of a government led by Nitish Kumar.Through his long political career, the JD(U) leader has been associated with many different parties. Born on March 1, 1951, in Bakhtiarpur, Nitish Kumar emerged from the socialist tradition and entered electoral politics in the 1970s before rising through organisational roles in Janata Parivar formations and later the Janata Dal (United).

His first significant executive breakthrough came in 2000 with a short stint as Chief Minister, then representing the Samata Party. He returned in 2005 and formed a stable government that marked the start of his public image as a leader focused on governance and law-and-order reform.

Over the next two decades, Nitish combined electoral appeal with frequent alliance recalibrations, alternating between partnerships with the BJP and opposition coalitions as political circumstances required. He has served multiple terms as the Chief Minister -- building a reputation for administrative interventions in infrastructure, rural electrification, road construction and public distribution reforms, earning the sobriquet of “sushashanbabu” or Mr Good Governance. His approach mixed technocratic initiatives with caste-sensitive political engineering, which helped sustain a broad, if sometimes shifting, support base. His colleague-turned-adversary Prashant Kishor had once famously stated in Hindi, loosely translated as Bihar blooms under Nitish Kumar.

Journalist Sankarshan Thakur had aptly titled Nitish Kumar’s biography ‘Single Man’, calling him “a wary man, often too careful, he won’t step onto ground he isn’t certain will hold”. The book mentions that in 1992, Nitish Kumar was not even on talking terms with Lalu Prasad and had an extremely ugly spat.

On the other hand, he firmly opposed Narendra Modi as PM in 2014. However, he allied with both at different times, switching sides midway, even while heading the state government. But the veteran politician has this habit of speaking out even at the cost of being politically incorrect, which, when pointed out, would bring out his reaction as “following my conscience”.

Patna Nitish Kumar Bihar Chief Minister 10th oath ceremony JD(U) BJP NDA government Bihar politics 2025 Bihar Assembly political alliances Janata Dal (United) Janata Parivar Samata Party governance reforms sushashanbabu administrative reforms infrastructure development rural electrification caste politics alliance shifts Prashant Kishor Sankarshan Thakur Single Man biography Lalu Prasad Narendra Modi political conscience 
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