Middle East conflict raises near-term risks for India but long-term growth outlook remains strong: RBI MPC member

Middle East conflict raises near-term risks for India but long-term growth outlook remains strong: RBI MPC member

The ongoing conflict in the Middle East could pose short-term challenges for the Indian economy by pushing up oil prices and disrupting trade flows, though the country’s long-term growth trajectory is unlikely to be significantly affected, according to Nagesh Kumar, an external member of the Reserve Bank of India’s Monetary Policy Committee (MPC).In an emailed…

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Nazriya Nazim joins ‘Suriya 47’ shoot; Suriya and Jyotika’s sweet gesture wins hearts

Nazriya Nazim joins ‘Suriya 47’ shoot; Suriya and Jyotika’s sweet gesture wins hearts

Nazriya Nazim has officially joined the shoot of ‘Suriya 47’, a project helmed by Jithu Madhavan. Suriya and Jyotika extended a warm welcome with a thoughtful gift hamper. This marks Nazriya’s first on-screen collaboration with Suriya in what is anticipated to be an action-comedy film. Actor Suriya is currently busy shooting his upcoming film which…

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Nitish Kumar  In a surprising turn of events, Bihar chief minister Nitish Kumar filed his nomination for the Rajya Sabha on Thursday in Patna. The sudden move has pushed Bihar into a major political shift while ending the tenure of the state’s longest chief minister.Nitish Kumar, who has served as Bihar’s longest-tenured chief minister for more than two decades, informed of his decision to contest Rajya Sabha elections via social media post. ‘Desire In My Heart’: Nitish Kumar’s Rajya Sabha Decision Sparks Protest, Anger Inside JD(U) Ranks “I seek to become a member of the Rajya Sabha in the elections being held this time. I want to assure you with complete honesty that my relationship with you will continue in the future as well, and my resolve to work together with you to build a developed Bihar will remain steadfast. Israel Iran WarUS-Israel-Iran War Live Updates: ‘Indian navy’s guest struck without warning’: Iran slams US after torpedo sinks warship IRIS Dena’Will bitterly regret’: Iran warns US after IRIS Dena, ‘Indian Navy’s guest’, sunk by torpedo’Could be targeted’: Second Iranian warship heads towards Sri Lanka a day after US submarine attackThe new government that will be formed will have my full cooperation and guidance,” the 75-year-old politician wrote on X.  For nearly two decades, Nitish has been in power in Bihar through coalitions. And one of the most intriguing paradoxes of Nitish’s long political career is that he governed Bihar for longer than any of his predecessors despite never leading a party that secured an outright majority in the state assembly.  His party, the Janata Dal (United), consistently relied on alliances with larger or equally powerful partners to remain in government.This unusual political equation made Nitish Kumar a master negotiator.Power in Bihar during his tenure depended not merely on electoral strength but on the ability to stitch together coalitions across caste blocs and ideological divides. Nitish Kumar excelled at precisely that. His ability to maintain political relevance even as the relative strength of his party fluctuated turned him into one of the most skilled negotiator of Indian politics.Supporters often describe this as evidence of his political acumen. Critics, however, argue that his survival depended more on opportunistic alliances than on a stable electoral mandate.Within the JD(U), the reaction to his decision has been one of disbelief.  Senior party leader and Bihar’s social welfare minister Madan Sahni publicly questioned whether the move truly reflected Nitish Kumar’s personal choice. “We are stunned to see whatever is happening. It is hard to believe that this could have been Nitish Kumar’s own decision,” news agency PTI quoted Sahni as saying.According to Sahni, Nitish Kumar had long expressed a desire to serve in all three legislative arenas of the democracy: the state assembly, the Lok Sabha and the Rajya Sabha. His move to the Upper House, therefore, was being presented as the fulfilment of that ambition.But for many within the JD(U), the transition felt less like a voluntary decision and more like the end of an era forced by changing political realities.Outside the party office in Patna, JD(U) workers gathered in anger and disbelief. Police were deployed to prevent supporters from marching toward the chief minister’s residence.Some refused to believe that the leader they had followed for decades would step down so abruptly.For years, even political rivals acknowledged Nitish Kumar’s stature. The late Sushil Kumar Modi, one of the BJP’s most prominent leaders in Bihar, had once described him as “prime minister material.”To many supporters, therefore, his exit from the chief minister’s office feels like a fall from a position once seen as nationally significant.Opposition leaders, however, see the moment differently.Tejashwi Yadav, leader of the opposition and son of Lalu Prasad Yadav, argued that Nitish Kumar’s predicament was the result of his own political decisions.”The BJP has done a Maharashtra in Bihar,” Tejashwi said, referring to controversial power shifts seen in other states. “But Nitish Kumar has only himself to blame. While in alliance, we supported him as chief minister despite having more MLAs, but he chose to walk away on two occasions.”Entry into politicsNitish Kumar was born on March 1, 1951, in Bakhtiarpur in Bihar’s Patna district. His father, Ram Lakhan Singh, was an Ayurvedic practitioner and a freedom fighter who had been associated with the Congress during the independence movement.He studied electrical engineering at the Bihar College of Engineering in Patna, now known as the National Institute of Technology (NIT) Patna. He briefly worked at the Bihar State Electricity Board before turning to politics.Nitish Kumar’s political identity was forged in the turbulence of the 1970s and 1980s.Like many leaders of his generation, he emerged from the socialist movement led by Jayaprakash Narayan during the anti-Emergency agitation. The movement produced a generation of politicians who would dominate north Indian politics for decades.Among them were Nitish Kumar and Lalu Prasad Yadav. Both leaders rose within the same political tradition. Both belonged to backward caste communities empowered by the Mandal revolution of the 1990s.Yet their political styles could not have been more different.  Lalu thrived on mass mobilisation, humour and confrontational politics. Nitish preferred administrative detail, negotiation and strategic positioning.The divergence became clearer as Lalu Prasad Yadav consolidated power in Bihar after becoming chief minister in 1990, following the implementation of the Mandal Commission recommendations by Prime Minister VP Singh.Lalu’s arrest of Lal Krishna Advani during the 1990 Ram Rath Yatra cemented his reputation as a defender of secular politics and a champion of backward caste empowerment.But as Lalu’s popularity grew, Nitish Kumar grew increasingly uneasy with what he saw as the concentration of power within one leader’s personality.In 1995, he finally broke away from the Janata Dal.The split marked the beginning of a long political rivalry that would define Bihar politics for decades.Experimentation before BJP allianceAfter leaving the Janata Dal, Nitish Kumar experimented with several political strategies in his quest to build an alternative to Lalu Prasad Yadav.Along with socialist leader George Fernandes, he founded the Samata Party.In his search for allies, Nitish Kumar briefly explored cooperation with the radical left-wing party CPI(ML) Liberation, which was then an emerging political force in parts of Bihar.The experiment reflected Kumar’s ideological roots in socialist politics. But the attempt soon revealed the limits of ideological alliances in a state where electoral arithmetic was dominated by caste coalitions.  Nitish Kumar eventually concluded that defeating Lalu Prasad Yadav required a broader political alliance.That calculation led him toward the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). In 1996, he contested the Lok Sabha elections as part of an alliance with the BJP.The creation of JD(U) One of Nitish Kumar’s most consequential political moves came when he persuaded veteran socialist leader Sharad Yadav to unite their factions.The merger created the Janata Dal (United).The new party became the central pillar of the BJP-led National Democratic Alliance in Bihar. At the time, the BJP recognised that its own social base in Bihar remained limited. It was widely perceived as a party dominated by upper castes.Nitish Kumar, by contrast, came from the Kurmi community and had credibility among backward caste voters. As a result, the BJP agreed to allow the JD(U) to contest more seats than the BJP itself in the assembly elections of 2005.The strategy proved decisive.After a fractured verdict earlier that year, a fresh election in November 2005 delivered a comfortable victory for the NDA. Nitish Kumar finally became the chief minister.The longest-serving CMOver the course of his political career, Nitish Kumar became the longest-serving chief minister in Bihar’s history, holding the office for more than two decades across multiple terms.Kumar first assumed office as chief minister briefly in March 2000, though that government lasted only a week after he failed to prove a majority in the assembly. His enduring tenure began in November 2005, when the alliance between the Janata Dal (United) and the Bharatiya Janata Party secured a clear mandate in the assembly elections.From then on, Kumar remained the central figure in Bihar politics, returning to the chief minister’s office multiple times through changing alliances and political realignments. His long tenure spanned dramatically different political phases — from the early push to restore law and order after the 1990s to the later years of coalition bargaining and shifting alliances.Last year in November, Nitish finally took oath as chief minister of Bihar for a record-extending tenth time. ‘Paltu Ram’: Flip-flops that defined Nitish’s careerIf governance made Nitish Kumar a respected administrator, his shifting alliances made him one of the most controversial political figures.His first major break with the BJP came in 2013, when Narendra Modi was elevated within the party and widely expected to become its prime ministerial candidate. Nitish Kumar ended his party’s 17-year alliance with the BJP, arguing that the country required inclusive leadership.But the decision proved politically costly.In the 2014 Lok Sabha elections, the JD(U) suffered a humiliating defeat, winning only two seats in Bihar.Accepting responsibility, Nitish Kumar resigned as chief minister, taking “moral responsibility” for the party’s performance.Yet his political instincts soon resurfaced.Within months, he regained power after installing Jitan Ram Manjhi as chief minister and later replacing him with the support of his former rival Lalu Prasad Yadav.The alliance between the two leaders culminated in the 2015 Mahagathbandhan victory, one of the BJP’s most significant electoral defeats in the Modi era.  But the partnership collapsed in 2017, when Nitish Kumar once again switched sides and returned to the BJP-led NDA.Another shift followed in 2022, when he broke away from the BJP again, only to return to the alliance once more in 2024.The repeated realignments earned him a nickname that became inseparable from his public image: “Paltu Ram.”These flip-flops became one of the defining features of Nitish Kumar’s career.The ‘Sushasan Babu’ of BiharDespite political controversies and shifting alliances, Nitish Kumar built a reputation for governance that earned him the popular nickname ‘Sushasan Babu’, or the man of good governance.When he first assumed office as chief minister in 2005, Bihar faced widespread criticism for poor infrastructure, weak law and order and sluggish economic growth.Nitish’s government focused on improving policing, speeding up criminal trials and expanding road and bridge construction across the state.His administration also launched several social welfare initiatives, including the Mukhyamantri Balika Cycle Yojana, which provided bicycles to schoolgirls to encourage education. The scheme significantly increased enrolment of girls in secondary schools and became one of the most widely cited symbols of his governance model.Other measures included reservations for women in local bodies and government jobs, as well as welfare programmes targeting extremely backward classes and Mahadalits.The masterstroke came after his government banned liquor in the state. The women voters, since then, have rallied behind Nitish making his party a winner every election.These initiatives also helped change Bihar’s governance narrative and restore a sense of administrative stability after years of turmoil and violence.A CM who rarely fought assembly electionsAnother distinctive aspect of Nitish Kumar’s political career has been his repeated use of the Legislative Council route to remain chief minister.After becoming CM in November 2005, Kumar did not contest an assembly election immediately. Instead, he entered the Bihar Legislative Council as a Member of the Legislative Council (MLC), the upper house of the state legislature, allowing him to continue in office without being elected to the assembly.He followed a similar route during subsequent terms, often choosing to remain an MLC rather than contest assembly polls directly. Under the Constitution, a person who is not a member of the legislature can serve as chief minister for six months, within which they must secure membership in either the assembly or the council.Kumar repeatedly used this provision by getting elected or nominated to the Legislative Council, ensuring continuity in office while avoiding the need to contest constituency-level elections.Although he did contest the 2015 Bihar assembly election from the Harnaut seat, winning comfortably, much of his time as chief minister was spent as a member of the legislative council.Supporters say this reflected his role as a statewide leader focused on governance rather than constituency politics. Critics, however, argued that the MLC route allowed him to remain in power while largely avoiding direct electoral contests in the assembly.The dynasty question For years, Nitish Kumar distinguished himself from many politicians by criticising “parivaarvaad”, or dynasty politics.He often argued that political leadership should emerge from public service rather than family inheritance.But as his son Nishant Kumar, now in his late forties, prepares to enter public life, that position may face its toughest test. If Nishant formally enters politics, Nitish Kumar could confront the same criticism he once directed at rival leaders.What remains undisputed, however, is his extraordinary ability to remain at the centre of Bihar’s politics for more than three decades.About the AuthorAbhishek MishraAbhishek Mishra is a Digital Content Producer at The Times of India, working with the news and global desks. He writes with a keen eye on foreign policy, defence tech developments, and the shifting currents of global geopolitics-and yes, Indian politics always finds a way onto his radar too.Read MoreEnd of ArticleFollow Us On Social MediaVideosJaishankar Dials Iran FM Araghchi After India Condoles Khamenei’s Death In US-Israeli StrikesIran Conflict Presents ‘Huge Opportunity’ For India To Become Clean Energy Exporter: Amitabh KantIndian YouTuber Nancy Grewal Killed In Canada Stabbing, Questions Rise Over Motive Behind Attack’Conflict In Backyard’: Rahul Gandhi Targets PM Modi On Iran Warship, Govt Denies Responsibility’India Deserves UN Security Council Seat’, Says Finland President Alexander Stubb In Strong Support‘Maha Strategy Repeated’: Opposition Hits Out at BJP After Nitish RS Move’Military Conflict Cannot Solve Issues’: PM Modi Warns World, Calls For End To Iran And Ukraine WarsPM Modi Hails Finland’s Contribution To India Growth From Telecom Networks To Chenab BridgeDMK-Congress Alliance Locks Seat Formula, Can DMK Secure 2nd Term?Sonu Sood Extends Free Shelter to Travellers Stuck in Dubai Amid US-Iran Tensions123Photostories7 ways to extend your car’s engine life12 traditional Bengali vegetarian dishes that are as good as a non-veg feast8 plants you should never grow from seed (and the smarter way to plant them)No fancy regimen needed: 5 simple wellness routines that actually workGautam Gambhir’s serene Rs.20 crore Delhi home which has beautifully utilised natural light for a grand impactCelebs stranded in UAE: Ajith Kumar, Lara Dutta and Sonal Chauhan share safety updates amid Middle East tensionsFrom Reneesha Rahiman to Rekha Ratheesh: Malayalam TV Stars Who Hit Back at Cyber BulliesLow haemoglobin? Doctors reveal 7 iron-rich foods and simple diet tips to boost absorption and prevent anaemia naturally5 unusual sculptures around the world that tourists can’t stop photographingUnderstanding RERA 2.0: 5 important changes every homebuyer and developer must know123Hot PicksChina Military BudgetIran Mobile Missile LauncersMiddle East CrisisNitish KumarIncome Tax CalculatorPublic holidays March 2026Bank Holidays MarchTop TrendingAP SSC Hall TicketsNFL RumorsFortnite v39 51 Update Release timeT20 World CupBengaluru Cab Driver TheftNancy GrewalMiddle East CrisisTelangana High CourtUS SubmarineTrump assassination plot

Nitish Kumar In a surprising turn of events, Bihar chief minister Nitish Kumar filed his nomination for the Rajya Sabha on Thursday in Patna. The sudden move has pushed Bihar into a major political shift while ending the tenure of the state’s longest chief minister.Nitish Kumar, who has served as Bihar’s longest-tenured chief minister for more than two decades, informed of his decision to contest Rajya Sabha elections via social media post. ‘Desire In My Heart’: Nitish Kumar’s Rajya Sabha Decision Sparks Protest, Anger Inside JD(U) Ranks “I seek to become a member of the Rajya Sabha in the elections being held this time. I want to assure you with complete honesty that my relationship with you will continue in the future as well, and my resolve to work together with you to build a developed Bihar will remain steadfast. Israel Iran WarUS-Israel-Iran War Live Updates: ‘Indian navy’s guest struck without warning’: Iran slams US after torpedo sinks warship IRIS Dena’Will bitterly regret’: Iran warns US after IRIS Dena, ‘Indian Navy’s guest’, sunk by torpedo’Could be targeted’: Second Iranian warship heads towards Sri Lanka a day after US submarine attackThe new government that will be formed will have my full cooperation and guidance,” the 75-year-old politician wrote on X. For nearly two decades, Nitish has been in power in Bihar through coalitions. And one of the most intriguing paradoxes of Nitish’s long political career is that he governed Bihar for longer than any of his predecessors despite never leading a party that secured an outright majority in the state assembly. His party, the Janata Dal (United), consistently relied on alliances with larger or equally powerful partners to remain in government.This unusual political equation made Nitish Kumar a master negotiator.Power in Bihar during his tenure depended not merely on electoral strength but on the ability to stitch together coalitions across caste blocs and ideological divides. Nitish Kumar excelled at precisely that. His ability to maintain political relevance even as the relative strength of his party fluctuated turned him into one of the most skilled negotiator of Indian politics.Supporters often describe this as evidence of his political acumen. Critics, however, argue that his survival depended more on opportunistic alliances than on a stable electoral mandate.Within the JD(U), the reaction to his decision has been one of disbelief. Senior party leader and Bihar’s social welfare minister Madan Sahni publicly questioned whether the move truly reflected Nitish Kumar’s personal choice. “We are stunned to see whatever is happening. It is hard to believe that this could have been Nitish Kumar’s own decision,” news agency PTI quoted Sahni as saying.According to Sahni, Nitish Kumar had long expressed a desire to serve in all three legislative arenas of the democracy: the state assembly, the Lok Sabha and the Rajya Sabha. His move to the Upper House, therefore, was being presented as the fulfilment of that ambition.But for many within the JD(U), the transition felt less like a voluntary decision and more like the end of an era forced by changing political realities.Outside the party office in Patna, JD(U) workers gathered in anger and disbelief. Police were deployed to prevent supporters from marching toward the chief minister’s residence.Some refused to believe that the leader they had followed for decades would step down so abruptly.For years, even political rivals acknowledged Nitish Kumar’s stature. The late Sushil Kumar Modi, one of the BJP’s most prominent leaders in Bihar, had once described him as “prime minister material.”To many supporters, therefore, his exit from the chief minister’s office feels like a fall from a position once seen as nationally significant.Opposition leaders, however, see the moment differently.Tejashwi Yadav, leader of the opposition and son of Lalu Prasad Yadav, argued that Nitish Kumar’s predicament was the result of his own political decisions.”The BJP has done a Maharashtra in Bihar,” Tejashwi said, referring to controversial power shifts seen in other states. “But Nitish Kumar has only himself to blame. While in alliance, we supported him as chief minister despite having more MLAs, but he chose to walk away on two occasions.”Entry into politicsNitish Kumar was born on March 1, 1951, in Bakhtiarpur in Bihar’s Patna district. His father, Ram Lakhan Singh, was an Ayurvedic practitioner and a freedom fighter who had been associated with the Congress during the independence movement.He studied electrical engineering at the Bihar College of Engineering in Patna, now known as the National Institute of Technology (NIT) Patna. He briefly worked at the Bihar State Electricity Board before turning to politics.Nitish Kumar’s political identity was forged in the turbulence of the 1970s and 1980s.Like many leaders of his generation, he emerged from the socialist movement led by Jayaprakash Narayan during the anti-Emergency agitation. The movement produced a generation of politicians who would dominate north Indian politics for decades.Among them were Nitish Kumar and Lalu Prasad Yadav. Both leaders rose within the same political tradition. Both belonged to backward caste communities empowered by the Mandal revolution of the 1990s.Yet their political styles could not have been more different. Lalu thrived on mass mobilisation, humour and confrontational politics. Nitish preferred administrative detail, negotiation and strategic positioning.The divergence became clearer as Lalu Prasad Yadav consolidated power in Bihar after becoming chief minister in 1990, following the implementation of the Mandal Commission recommendations by Prime Minister VP Singh.Lalu’s arrest of Lal Krishna Advani during the 1990 Ram Rath Yatra cemented his reputation as a defender of secular politics and a champion of backward caste empowerment.But as Lalu’s popularity grew, Nitish Kumar grew increasingly uneasy with what he saw as the concentration of power within one leader’s personality.In 1995, he finally broke away from the Janata Dal.The split marked the beginning of a long political rivalry that would define Bihar politics for decades.Experimentation before BJP allianceAfter leaving the Janata Dal, Nitish Kumar experimented with several political strategies in his quest to build an alternative to Lalu Prasad Yadav.Along with socialist leader George Fernandes, he founded the Samata Party.In his search for allies, Nitish Kumar briefly explored cooperation with the radical left-wing party CPI(ML) Liberation, which was then an emerging political force in parts of Bihar.The experiment reflected Kumar’s ideological roots in socialist politics. But the attempt soon revealed the limits of ideological alliances in a state where electoral arithmetic was dominated by caste coalitions. Nitish Kumar eventually concluded that defeating Lalu Prasad Yadav required a broader political alliance.That calculation led him toward the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). In 1996, he contested the Lok Sabha elections as part of an alliance with the BJP.The creation of JD(U) One of Nitish Kumar’s most consequential political moves came when he persuaded veteran socialist leader Sharad Yadav to unite their factions.The merger created the Janata Dal (United).The new party became the central pillar of the BJP-led National Democratic Alliance in Bihar. At the time, the BJP recognised that its own social base in Bihar remained limited. It was widely perceived as a party dominated by upper castes.Nitish Kumar, by contrast, came from the Kurmi community and had credibility among backward caste voters. As a result, the BJP agreed to allow the JD(U) to contest more seats than the BJP itself in the assembly elections of 2005.The strategy proved decisive.After a fractured verdict earlier that year, a fresh election in November 2005 delivered a comfortable victory for the NDA. Nitish Kumar finally became the chief minister.The longest-serving CMOver the course of his political career, Nitish Kumar became the longest-serving chief minister in Bihar’s history, holding the office for more than two decades across multiple terms.Kumar first assumed office as chief minister briefly in March 2000, though that government lasted only a week after he failed to prove a majority in the assembly. His enduring tenure began in November 2005, when the alliance between the Janata Dal (United) and the Bharatiya Janata Party secured a clear mandate in the assembly elections.From then on, Kumar remained the central figure in Bihar politics, returning to the chief minister’s office multiple times through changing alliances and political realignments. His long tenure spanned dramatically different political phases — from the early push to restore law and order after the 1990s to the later years of coalition bargaining and shifting alliances.Last year in November, Nitish finally took oath as chief minister of Bihar for a record-extending tenth time. ‘Paltu Ram’: Flip-flops that defined Nitish’s careerIf governance made Nitish Kumar a respected administrator, his shifting alliances made him one of the most controversial political figures.His first major break with the BJP came in 2013, when Narendra Modi was elevated within the party and widely expected to become its prime ministerial candidate. Nitish Kumar ended his party’s 17-year alliance with the BJP, arguing that the country required inclusive leadership.But the decision proved politically costly.In the 2014 Lok Sabha elections, the JD(U) suffered a humiliating defeat, winning only two seats in Bihar.Accepting responsibility, Nitish Kumar resigned as chief minister, taking “moral responsibility” for the party’s performance.Yet his political instincts soon resurfaced.Within months, he regained power after installing Jitan Ram Manjhi as chief minister and later replacing him with the support of his former rival Lalu Prasad Yadav.The alliance between the two leaders culminated in the 2015 Mahagathbandhan victory, one of the BJP’s most significant electoral defeats in the Modi era. But the partnership collapsed in 2017, when Nitish Kumar once again switched sides and returned to the BJP-led NDA.Another shift followed in 2022, when he broke away from the BJP again, only to return to the alliance once more in 2024.The repeated realignments earned him a nickname that became inseparable from his public image: “Paltu Ram.”These flip-flops became one of the defining features of Nitish Kumar’s career.The ‘Sushasan Babu’ of BiharDespite political controversies and shifting alliances, Nitish Kumar built a reputation for governance that earned him the popular nickname ‘Sushasan Babu’, or the man of good governance.When he first assumed office as chief minister in 2005, Bihar faced widespread criticism for poor infrastructure, weak law and order and sluggish economic growth.Nitish’s government focused on improving policing, speeding up criminal trials and expanding road and bridge construction across the state.His administration also launched several social welfare initiatives, including the Mukhyamantri Balika Cycle Yojana, which provided bicycles to schoolgirls to encourage education. The scheme significantly increased enrolment of girls in secondary schools and became one of the most widely cited symbols of his governance model.Other measures included reservations for women in local bodies and government jobs, as well as welfare programmes targeting extremely backward classes and Mahadalits.The masterstroke came after his government banned liquor in the state. The women voters, since then, have rallied behind Nitish making his party a winner every election.These initiatives also helped change Bihar’s governance narrative and restore a sense of administrative stability after years of turmoil and violence.A CM who rarely fought assembly electionsAnother distinctive aspect of Nitish Kumar’s political career has been his repeated use of the Legislative Council route to remain chief minister.After becoming CM in November 2005, Kumar did not contest an assembly election immediately. Instead, he entered the Bihar Legislative Council as a Member of the Legislative Council (MLC), the upper house of the state legislature, allowing him to continue in office without being elected to the assembly.He followed a similar route during subsequent terms, often choosing to remain an MLC rather than contest assembly polls directly. Under the Constitution, a person who is not a member of the legislature can serve as chief minister for six months, within which they must secure membership in either the assembly or the council.Kumar repeatedly used this provision by getting elected or nominated to the Legislative Council, ensuring continuity in office while avoiding the need to contest constituency-level elections.Although he did contest the 2015 Bihar assembly election from the Harnaut seat, winning comfortably, much of his time as chief minister was spent as a member of the legislative council.Supporters say this reflected his role as a statewide leader focused on governance rather than constituency politics. Critics, however, argued that the MLC route allowed him to remain in power while largely avoiding direct electoral contests in the assembly.The dynasty question For years, Nitish Kumar distinguished himself from many politicians by criticising “parivaarvaad”, or dynasty politics.He often argued that political leadership should emerge from public service rather than family inheritance.But as his son Nishant Kumar, now in his late forties, prepares to enter public life, that position may face its toughest test. If Nishant formally enters politics, Nitish Kumar could confront the same criticism he once directed at rival leaders.What remains undisputed, however, is his extraordinary ability to remain at the centre of Bihar’s politics for more than three decades.About the AuthorAbhishek MishraAbhishek Mishra is a Digital Content Producer at The Times of India, working with the news and global desks. He writes with a keen eye on foreign policy, defence tech developments, and the shifting currents of global geopolitics-and yes, Indian politics always finds a way onto his radar too.Read MoreEnd of ArticleFollow Us On Social MediaVideosJaishankar Dials Iran FM Araghchi After India Condoles Khamenei’s Death In US-Israeli StrikesIran Conflict Presents ‘Huge Opportunity’ For India To Become Clean Energy Exporter: Amitabh KantIndian YouTuber Nancy Grewal Killed In Canada Stabbing, Questions Rise Over Motive Behind Attack’Conflict In Backyard’: Rahul Gandhi Targets PM Modi On Iran Warship, Govt Denies Responsibility’India Deserves UN Security Council Seat’, Says Finland President Alexander Stubb In Strong Support‘Maha Strategy Repeated’: Opposition Hits Out at BJP After Nitish RS Move’Military Conflict Cannot Solve Issues’: PM Modi Warns World, Calls For End To Iran And Ukraine WarsPM Modi Hails Finland’s Contribution To India Growth From Telecom Networks To Chenab BridgeDMK-Congress Alliance Locks Seat Formula, Can DMK Secure 2nd Term?Sonu Sood Extends Free Shelter to Travellers Stuck in Dubai Amid US-Iran Tensions123Photostories7 ways to extend your car’s engine life12 traditional Bengali vegetarian dishes that are as good as a non-veg feast8 plants you should never grow from seed (and the smarter way to plant them)No fancy regimen needed: 5 simple wellness routines that actually workGautam Gambhir’s serene Rs.20 crore Delhi home which has beautifully utilised natural light for a grand impactCelebs stranded in UAE: Ajith Kumar, Lara Dutta and Sonal Chauhan share safety updates amid Middle East tensionsFrom Reneesha Rahiman to Rekha Ratheesh: Malayalam TV Stars Who Hit Back at Cyber BulliesLow haemoglobin? Doctors reveal 7 iron-rich foods and simple diet tips to boost absorption and prevent anaemia naturally5 unusual sculptures around the world that tourists can’t stop photographingUnderstanding RERA 2.0: 5 important changes every homebuyer and developer must know123Hot PicksChina Military BudgetIran Mobile Missile LauncersMiddle East CrisisNitish KumarIncome Tax CalculatorPublic holidays March 2026Bank Holidays MarchTop TrendingAP SSC Hall TicketsNFL RumorsFortnite v39 51 Update Release timeT20 World CupBengaluru Cab Driver TheftNancy GrewalMiddle East CrisisTelangana High CourtUS SubmarineTrump assassination plot

In a surprising turn of events, Bihar chief minister Nitish Kumar filed his nomination for the Rajya Sabha on Thursday in Patna. The sudden move has pushed Bihar into a major political shift while ending the tenure of the state’s longest chief minister.Nitish Kumar, who has served as Bihar’s longest-tenured chief minister for more than…

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Mar 05, 2026, 16:58 IST

Mar 05, 2026, 16:58 IST

The Times of India Sports Awards (TOISA) is set to return with its eighth edition, celebrating the inspiring journeys and achievements of India’s finest athletes across multiple disciplines. The much-anticipated TOISA 2025 ceremony will take place on March 21, 2026 in Lucknow, bringing together sporting icons and emerging stars who made the nation proud over…

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IND vs ENG: Rohit Sharma caught chatting with India captain Suryakumar Yadav ahead of toss at T20 World Cup semi-final

IND vs ENG: Rohit Sharma caught chatting with India captain Suryakumar Yadav ahead of toss at T20 World Cup semi-final

Rohit Sharma and Suryakumar Yadav (Screengrab) India faced England in the T20 World Cup semi-final at Wankhede Stadium on Thursday, with an interesting moment before the toss as Rohit Sharma, India’s T20 World Cup 2024-winning captain, was seen chatting with current skipper Suryakumar Yadav. The conversation caught the attention of fans and cameras just before…

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IB ACIO Tier 2 result 2026 released at mha.gov.in; download PDF here

IB ACIO Tier 2 result 2026 released at mha.gov.in; download PDF here

IB Tier-II result 2026: The Intelligence Bureau (IB), under the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA), has officially published the Tier-II result for the Executive (ACIO Grade-II) recruitment. This marks a crucial milestone in the selection process for 3,717 vacancies nationwide, following the completion of the Tier-II descriptive examination. Candidates who cleared the Tier-I objective test…

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Sudipto Sen says producing films is tough, focuses on directing ‘Charak: Fair of Faith’

Sudipto Sen says producing films is tough, focuses on directing ‘Charak: Fair of Faith’

Renowned filmmaker Sudipto Sen, celebrated for his work on ‘The Kerala Story,’ is pivoting away from production roles to concentrate on directing poignant tales. His next venture, ‘Charak: Fair of Faith,’ explores the deep connections between faith and rituals, grounded in thorough research. Director Sudipto Sen has said he does not plan to produce films…

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3 science-backed signs your relationship is actually healthy and meant to last, shares relationship expert

3 science-backed signs your relationship is actually healthy and meant to last, shares relationship expert

We’ve all been sold the same filmy lie about perfect love and relationships: that “real” love is a seamless Bollywood montage where couples skip through life in perfect harmony, never bickering over the laundry or wondering if they’re being annoying. But let’s get real—real-life romance isn’t a scripted dance. It’s more like a spicy biryani:…

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Mysterious fireball, sonic boom experienced in Vancouver, Western Washington was indeed a meteor traveling at 33 kmps, confirms Nasa

Mysterious fireball, sonic boom experienced in Vancouver, Western Washington was indeed a meteor traveling at 33 kmps, confirms Nasa

The fireball seen in the sky from across Western Washington and British Columbia, followed by a sonic boom, was indeed a meteor which was travelling slightly east of north at a speed of about 33 kilometres per second, or about 119,000 km/h, reports confirmed. Several people called the police without understanding whether it was an…

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‘Almost all targets achieved’: Pak PM Sharif’s aide claims success in Afghanistan conflict

‘Almost all targets achieved’: Pak PM Sharif’s aide claims success in Afghanistan conflict

Pakistan has achieved nearly all of its objectives in the recent military operation against Afghanistan, according to Rana Sanaullah, special assistant to Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, on Thursday.Islamabad launched Operation Ghazab lil-Haq last week in response to attacks by the Afghan Taliban forces on more than 50 locations along the over 2,600-kilometer border between the…

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Who is Tim Sheehy? Republican senator who helped officers remove ex-Navy SEAL Brian McGinnis from Senate hearing after disruption

Who is Tim Sheehy? Republican senator who helped officers remove ex-Navy SEAL Brian McGinnis from Senate hearing after disruption

Republican Senator Tim Sheehy was involved in a confrontation during a US Senate hearing on the war in Iran. Video from the incident shows the senator helping police forcefully remove an anti-war protester who had disrupted the proceedings with an apparent anti-Israel and anti-war stance.The incident happened during a hearing in Washington on Wednesday. A…

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NEW DELHI: March 5, 2026 – TechGig, India’s largest community of over 5.6 million developers and tech enthusiasts, today announced its flagship International Women’s Day initiative: “She Builds the Future: Power, Presence & Progress.” Scheduled for 7–8 March 2026, this two-day virtual leadership summit moves beyond symbolic celebration to address the critical need for robust leadership pipelines in a rapidly evolving global economy.As AI, automation, and hybrid work models redefine the corporate world, TechGig’s initiative focuses on the practical mechanics of leadership. The event brings together a powerhouse lineup of women leaders from global giants including Fiserv, Wipro, Siemens, Wells Fargo, and OpenText to discuss scaling high-performance teams and driving measurable business outcomes.Live CoverageUS-Israel-Iran War Live Updates: ‘Indian navy’s guest struck without warning’: Iran slams US after torpedo sinks warship IRIS Dena’Will bitterly regret’: Iran warns US after IRIS Dena, ‘Indian Navy’s guest’, sunk by torpedoWhat is Minuteman III missile? The ‘doomsday’ weapon US tested amid war with Iran”Leadership today is no longer defined solely by hierarchy; it is characterized by influence, visibility, and measurable progress,”Shalini Tewari, Head of TechGig & Chief Operating Officer – CoolBoots Media. “‘She Builds the Future’ is conceptualized to spotlight the next generation of leaders who are navigating shorter product cycles and distributed teams with vision and resilience.”A two-day roadmap (7–8 March)The initiative, hosted via the Airmeet platform, features three core sessions designed for engineering leads, HR professionals, and aspiring executives:Opening Panel (7th March, 12:00 PM IST): Focuses on progress and gaps in engineering, data, and business excellence with leaders from Fiserv, Nucleus Software, Wipro, Siemens, and GlobalLogic.Cross Talk (8th March, 11:30 AM IST): An intimate conversation on executive presence and cross-functional influence featuring senior leaders from OpenText and C5i.Closing Panel (8th March, 4:00 PM IST): A forward-looking session on building future-ready organizations with experts from Wells Fargo, Societe Generale GSC, Epsilon India, and CoolBoots Media.Continuing the momentum throughout Women’s Day month, TechGig will host an exclusive podcast session on 16th March 2026 featuring Harnidh Kaur. The session, titled “Building AI-Ready, Future-Proof Careers: Why Women Must Lead the AI Shift,” will dive deep into how women can position themselves at the forefront of the technological transition to AI.Why it matters in 2026With the tech ecosystem evolving faster than ever, “She Builds the Future” focuses on three defining pillars:Power: Strategic influence and decision-making authority.Presence: Credibility and visibility in high-stakes environments.Progress: Building cultures that foster sustainable, long-term growth.Registration and participationRegistrations for the summit and subsequent sessions are now open to engineering leaders, HR professionals, and stakeholders across the enterprise ecosystem.To register, visit: https://www.techgig.com/she-builds-the-future-2026End of ArticleFollow Us On Social MediaVideosIran Conflict Presents ‘Huge Opportunity’ For India To Become Clean Energy Exporter: Amitabh KantIndian YouTuber Nancy Grewal Killed In Canada Stabbing, Questions Rise Over Motive Behind Attack’Conflict In Backyard’: Rahul Gandhi Targets PM Modi On Iran Warship, Govt Denies Responsibility’India Deserves UN Security Council Seat’, Says Finland President Alexander Stubb In Strong Support‘Maha Strategy Repeated’: Opposition Hits Out at BJP After Nitish RS Move’Military Conflict Cannot Solve Issues’: PM Modi Warns World, Calls For End To Iran And Ukraine WarsPM Modi Hails Finland’s Contribution To India Growth From Telecom Networks To Chenab BridgeDMK-Congress Alliance Locks Seat Formula, Can DMK Secure 2nd Term?Sonu Sood Extends Free Shelter to Travellers Stuck in Dubai Amid US-Iran Tensions’Desire In My Heart’: Nitish Kumar’s Rajya Sabha Decision Sparks Protest, Anger Inside JD(U) Ranks123PhotostoriesGautam Gambhir’s serene Rs.20 crore Delhi home which has beautifully utilised natural light for a grand impactCelebs stranded in UAE: Ajith Kumar, Lara Dutta and Sonal Chauhan share safety updates amid Middle East tensionsFrom Reneesha Rahiman to Rekha Ratheesh: Malayalam TV Stars Who Hit Back at Cyber BulliesLow haemoglobin? Doctors reveal 7 iron-rich foods and simple diet tips to boost absorption and prevent anaemia naturally5 unusual sculptures around the world that tourists can’t stop photographingUnderstanding RERA 2.0: 5 important changes every homebuyer and developer must knowInside Virat Kohli’s stunning car collection: From Audi R8 V10 Plus to Lamborghini Huracán and BMW M5Chennai Metro’s first-mile push: 220 feeder buses to connect 11 key stationsFrom Sivakarthikeyan to Vijay Sethupathi: Tamil TV stars who cruise in style with lavish vehiclesKannada actresses who opened up about their painful breakups and toxic relationships123Hot PicksChina Military BudgetIran Mobile Missile LauncersMiddle East CrisisNitish KumarIncome Tax CalculatorPublic holidays March 2026Bank Holidays MarchTop TrendingAP SSC Hall TicketsNFL RumorsFortnite v39 51 Update Release timeT20 World CupBengaluru Cab Driver TheftNancy GrewalMiddle East CrisisTelangana High CourtUS SubmarineTrump assassination plot

NEW DELHI: March 5, 2026 – TechGig, India’s largest community of over 5.6 million developers and tech enthusiasts, today announced its flagship International Women’s Day initiative: “She Builds the Future: Power, Presence & Progress.” Scheduled for 7–8 March 2026, this two-day virtual leadership summit moves beyond symbolic celebration to address the critical need for robust leadership pipelines in a rapidly evolving global economy.As AI, automation, and hybrid work models redefine the corporate world, TechGig’s initiative focuses on the practical mechanics of leadership. The event brings together a powerhouse lineup of women leaders from global giants including Fiserv, Wipro, Siemens, Wells Fargo, and OpenText to discuss scaling high-performance teams and driving measurable business outcomes.Live CoverageUS-Israel-Iran War Live Updates: ‘Indian navy’s guest struck without warning’: Iran slams US after torpedo sinks warship IRIS Dena’Will bitterly regret’: Iran warns US after IRIS Dena, ‘Indian Navy’s guest’, sunk by torpedoWhat is Minuteman III missile? The ‘doomsday’ weapon US tested amid war with Iran”Leadership today is no longer defined solely by hierarchy; it is characterized by influence, visibility, and measurable progress,”Shalini Tewari, Head of TechGig & Chief Operating Officer – CoolBoots Media. “‘She Builds the Future’ is conceptualized to spotlight the next generation of leaders who are navigating shorter product cycles and distributed teams with vision and resilience.”A two-day roadmap (7–8 March)The initiative, hosted via the Airmeet platform, features three core sessions designed for engineering leads, HR professionals, and aspiring executives:Opening Panel (7th March, 12:00 PM IST): Focuses on progress and gaps in engineering, data, and business excellence with leaders from Fiserv, Nucleus Software, Wipro, Siemens, and GlobalLogic.Cross Talk (8th March, 11:30 AM IST): An intimate conversation on executive presence and cross-functional influence featuring senior leaders from OpenText and C5i.Closing Panel (8th March, 4:00 PM IST): A forward-looking session on building future-ready organizations with experts from Wells Fargo, Societe Generale GSC, Epsilon India, and CoolBoots Media.Continuing the momentum throughout Women’s Day month, TechGig will host an exclusive podcast session on 16th March 2026 featuring Harnidh Kaur. The session, titled “Building AI-Ready, Future-Proof Careers: Why Women Must Lead the AI Shift,” will dive deep into how women can position themselves at the forefront of the technological transition to AI.Why it matters in 2026With the tech ecosystem evolving faster than ever, “She Builds the Future” focuses on three defining pillars:Power: Strategic influence and decision-making authority.Presence: Credibility and visibility in high-stakes environments.Progress: Building cultures that foster sustainable, long-term growth.Registration and participationRegistrations for the summit and subsequent sessions are now open to engineering leaders, HR professionals, and stakeholders across the enterprise ecosystem.To register, visit: https://www.techgig.com/she-builds-the-future-2026End of ArticleFollow Us On Social MediaVideosIran Conflict Presents ‘Huge Opportunity’ For India To Become Clean Energy Exporter: Amitabh KantIndian YouTuber Nancy Grewal Killed In Canada Stabbing, Questions Rise Over Motive Behind Attack’Conflict In Backyard’: Rahul Gandhi Targets PM Modi On Iran Warship, Govt Denies Responsibility’India Deserves UN Security Council Seat’, Says Finland President Alexander Stubb In Strong Support‘Maha Strategy Repeated’: Opposition Hits Out at BJP After Nitish RS Move’Military Conflict Cannot Solve Issues’: PM Modi Warns World, Calls For End To Iran And Ukraine WarsPM Modi Hails Finland’s Contribution To India Growth From Telecom Networks To Chenab BridgeDMK-Congress Alliance Locks Seat Formula, Can DMK Secure 2nd Term?Sonu Sood Extends Free Shelter to Travellers Stuck in Dubai Amid US-Iran Tensions’Desire In My Heart’: Nitish Kumar’s Rajya Sabha Decision Sparks Protest, Anger Inside JD(U) Ranks123PhotostoriesGautam Gambhir’s serene Rs.20 crore Delhi home which has beautifully utilised natural light for a grand impactCelebs stranded in UAE: Ajith Kumar, Lara Dutta and Sonal Chauhan share safety updates amid Middle East tensionsFrom Reneesha Rahiman to Rekha Ratheesh: Malayalam TV Stars Who Hit Back at Cyber BulliesLow haemoglobin? Doctors reveal 7 iron-rich foods and simple diet tips to boost absorption and prevent anaemia naturally5 unusual sculptures around the world that tourists can’t stop photographingUnderstanding RERA 2.0: 5 important changes every homebuyer and developer must knowInside Virat Kohli’s stunning car collection: From Audi R8 V10 Plus to Lamborghini Huracán and BMW M5Chennai Metro’s first-mile push: 220 feeder buses to connect 11 key stationsFrom Sivakarthikeyan to Vijay Sethupathi: Tamil TV stars who cruise in style with lavish vehiclesKannada actresses who opened up about their painful breakups and toxic relationships123Hot PicksChina Military BudgetIran Mobile Missile LauncersMiddle East CrisisNitish KumarIncome Tax CalculatorPublic holidays March 2026Bank Holidays MarchTop TrendingAP SSC Hall TicketsNFL RumorsFortnite v39 51 Update Release timeT20 World CupBengaluru Cab Driver TheftNancy GrewalMiddle East CrisisTelangana High CourtUS SubmarineTrump assassination plot

NEW DELHI: March 5, 2026 – TechGig, India’s largest community of over 5.6 million developers and tech enthusiasts, today announced its flagship International Women’s Day initiative: “She Builds the Future: Power, Presence & Progress.” Scheduled for 7–8 March 2026, this two-day virtual leadership summit moves beyond symbolic celebration to address the critical need for robust…

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Mar 05, 2026, 15:34 IST

Mar 05, 2026, 15:34 IST

Gautam Gambhir and Tendulkar family at Arjun Tendulkar’s wedding celebrations (Agency Image) Gautam Gambhir was spotted attending the wedding celebrations of Arjun Tendulkar in Mumbai just hours before India’s crucial semifinal against England cricket team in the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup. The Indian head coach arrived at the ceremony dressed in traditional attire, drawing…

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