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Nepal polls: RSP wins 124 seats followed by Nepali Congress with 17

Nepal’s parliamentary election results indicate a landslide victory for the Rastriya Swatantra Party (RSP), putting it close to a two-thirds majority.

Balendra Shah, a candidate of the Rastriya Swatantra Party (RSP) from Jhapa Constituency-5, shows a certificate at the Election Commission premises after winning the constituency in the Nepal general elections, in Jhapa, Nepal. Balendra Shah 'Balen' defeated four-time prime minister K P Sharma Oli by a huge margin of about 50,000 votes. Photo: PTI
Summary
  • Rastriya Swatantra Party won 124 seats and is leading in one more, far ahead of rivals like Nepali Congress and Communist Party of Nepal (Unified Marxist–Leninist).

  • In proportional voting, RSP secured about 3.79 million votes, significantly higher than other parties.

  • Balendra Shah is set to become Nepal’s first Madhesi and youngest prime minister.

The Rastriya Swatantra Party (RSP) is heading towards a two-thirds majority in Nepal's parliamentary polls, securing 124 seats under direct voting and nearly 40 lakh votes under the proportionate-voting system as of 7 am on Monday.

The RSP has won 124 seats and is leading in one seat, whereas the Nepali Congress (NC) has won 17 seats and is leading in one seat. The CPN-UML has won eight seats and is leading in one seat and the NCP has won seven seats. The Shram Sanskriti Party has won three seats, the RPP and Independent candidates have won one seat each.

So far, the results for 161 of the 165 seats have been declared under direct voting. The outcome on the remaining four seats is expected to be declared in the afternoon.

Under proportionate voting, the RSP has secured 37,89,803 votes, the NC 12,75,594, the CPN-UML 10,79,726, the NCP 5,55,300, the Shram Sanskriti Party 2,65,398, the Janata Samajwadi Party 1,16,463 and the Rastriya Parivartan Party has bagged 1,08,084 votes.

Nepal is set to witness its first Madhesi prime minister - Balendra Shah - who will also be the youngest elected executive head in the history of the Himalayan country.

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