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Rajya Sabha Results and Alliance Fragility in Jharkhand and Mizoram

Friday, June 19, 2026
5 min read
Rajya Sabha Results and Alliance Fragility in Jharkhand and Mizoram

That Rajya Sabha mess in Jharkhand felt huge. You know, the June 18 results. Parimal Nathwani , that independent guy backed by the NDA , snagged one of those seats from there. Defeated Pranav Jha for the Congress pick. And that immediately threw a spotlight on how shaky things are inside the INDIA bloc.

The other seat went to Baidhyanath Ram , who was riding the Jharkhand Mukti Morcha wave. It just meant the ruling alliance in the state couldn't pull off a clean sweep, despite what everyone thought they had. A real shock, honestly. Opposition leaders were expecting both seats to be locked down based on their numbers.

It turns out the math didn’t matter much at all. This whole thing hinged on how people actually voted inside the Assembly. It was that single transferable vote system throwing everything into chaos. You need a certain quota. But getting those two spots? That required more than just raw strength.

Reports kept surfacing about this fragmentation. Even moving four or six MLAs just abstentions, cross-voting stuff that seemed to be enough to derail the second seat for the opposition side. Nathwani benefited from exactly that kind of split. It wasn’t about who had the most votes overall; it was about failing to consolidate behind one single challenger.

It really highlighted how fragile these state alliances are, especially when secrets are involved. Voting is secret ballot. Party whips? They just don't hold up in practice. Legislators can drift. That deviation changed everything in real time. The ruling coalition’s internal discipline seemed completely fractured there. One seat held by JMM , the Congress ended up empty-handed. It just magnified all the existing tension about coordination.

Congress leaders started pointing fingers immediately. They talked about a breakdown. Betrayal through these secret shifts. Strategists had been so confident in their pre-election calculations that they’d have the seat but that confidence evaporated fast once the count started rolling in. It showed how much internal friction eats away at an alliance when you need everyone marching to the same beat.

It just reopened those old questions about unity, state by state. How can a national alignment translate into consistent behavior down there? The result added another layer of stress to what was already happening within the opposition groups.

And then you look at Mizoram . Something entirely different happened there. That lone Rajya Sabha seat went to K Laltluangkima from the ZPM . It’s their first time in the Upper House, a symbolic thing, really.

That election felt almost one-sided. The ZPM had a massive lead in the Assembly forty seats, they basically had a clear majority. So, K Laltluangkima got it without much real fight happening. Even the opposition parties, BJP and Congress , seemed to just watch. Minimal resistance. A smooth process overall.

It’s more about that symbolism now. For the ZPM , getting that seat is huge. It stretches their reach from state politics into national parliamentary space. It's a milestone. But back in Jharkhand? That whole story was less about who won and more about how easily things can unravel when you rely on promises across state lines during an election. Numbers aren’t enough sometimes. Not really.

Written by Gree News Team — Senior Editorial Board

Gree News Team covers international news and global affairs at Gree News. Our collective of senior editors is dedicated to providing independent, accurate, and responsible journalism for a global audience.

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