Nepal's newly formed Rastriya Swantantra Party leads in early counting of votes
Nepals newly-formed Rastriya Swatantra Party RSP was leading in early counting of votes on Friday in the countrys first general elections since the violent Gen Z protests led to the downfall of the K P Sharma Oli-led coalition government.
- Country:
- Nepal
Nepal's newly-formed Rastriya Swatantra Party (RSP) was leading in early counting of votes on Friday in the country's first general elections since the violent Gen Z protests led to the downfall of the K P Sharma Oli-led coalition government. The RSP led by former rapper Balendra Shah, who was also the mayor of Kathmandu, won one seat and is leading in another 36, while the Nepali Congress is ahead on five, according to preliminary results in 46 seats where counting is in progress. Ousted premier Oli's CPN (UML) was ahead on three seats and the Nepali Communist Party on one. Nepal witnessed about 60 per cent voter turnout during the elections to the House of Representatives on Thursday - the country's first polls since violent Gen Z protests that toppled the K P Sharma Oli-led coalition government last year. The RSP has won the Kathmandu 1 constituency with its candidate Ranju Darshana winning by a ''huge margin'', according to RSP central committee member R K Dhungana. Ranju secured more than 10,000 votes, almost double than the nearest rival, Prabal Thapa Chhetri of the Nepali Congress, Dhungana said. However, the Election Commission is yet to officially announce the victory. Former Kathmandu mayor Balendra Shah, popularly known as Balen, is leading in Jhapa 5 constituency over ousted prime minister and Communist Party of Nepal (Unified Marxist–Leninist) chair Oli. The RSP is leading in all of 10 constituencies of Kathmandu, according to media reports. Vote counting started late on Thursday night and is expected to be completed by Friday night, according to the Election Commission. The RSP, formed in 2022, has received significant support during the campaign, and Shah is said to be a strong candidate for prime minister. On the other hand, the Nepali Congress and CPN (UML) were part of the government toppled by the Gen Z last year. Nepali Congress president Gagan Thapa is the prime ministerial candidate of his party, whereas the CPN (UML) has projected Oli as its PM face. Nepal's 18.9 million voters were eligible to elect 275 members of the House of Representatives. They will elect 165 HoR members through first past the post (FPTP) or direct voting system, and 110 members through proportionate voting. Around 3,400 candidates are vying for 165 seats under direct voting, and 3,135 candidates for 110 seats through proportionate voting.
(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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