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Vote counting continues in Nepal election - what is the latest result?
Vote counting continues in Nepal election - what is the latest result?
1 day ago
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Ayeshea Perera,Asia Digital Editorand
Kelly Ng
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AFP via Getty Images
Counting of votes in Nepal’s general election held on 5 March shows the party of rapper and ex-Kathmandu mayor Balendra Shah on course to win a possible supermajority in parliament.
The Rastriya Swatantra Party’s (RSP) win would mark the first time in decades that a single party garners a majority in Nepal, which has a two-system format that makes it difficult for any one party to win outright.
The snap election was held six months after deadly youth protests toppled the government in September 2025.
Who is ahead according to results released so far?
As of Monday evening Nepal time, Balendra Shah’s Rastriya Swatantra Party (RSP) had won 125 of the 165 seats allocated through the first past the post (FPTP) system.
The party is also likely to capture at least 58 of the 110 seats allocated through proportional representation (PR), according to BBC Nepali’s calculations based on the election commission’s latest data and formula.
This means the party could be just one seat short of securing a two-thirds majority in parliament.
Results for 164 of the first past the post seats have been announced, while counting for proportional representation is still underway.
The RSP has put forward Shah as its prime ministerial candidate. He defeated the former Nepalese Prime Minister Sharma KP Oli in his parliamentary constituency, taking him one step closer to becoming the country’s next prime minister.
If he is confirmed in that position, that would make him the youngest prime minister in the history of Nepal.
When will we know the final result of the Nepal election?
An official from the Election Commission said all the vote counting would be finished by Tuesday evening local time, and it would take at least four days for the commission to formally declare the final results.
Most of the results have already been released in both counts - FPTP and PR.
The speed of the results is a huge departure from previous polls.
During the last election in 2022, it took nearly two weeks for results to be released.
This is because some polling stations are located in difficult, hilly terrain – more than 80% of Nepal is mountainous – which makes the collection of ballot boxes a challenging logistical exercise.
Some need to be carried down by hand, for instance, while others have to be airlifted in and out of polling stations.
Planes and helicopters are also not allowed into some remote areas after dark, which often means collection can begin only the next morning. Bad weather also interferes with the collection process.
EPA
Getting ballot boxes and election officials to all corners of the Himalayan republic is a logistical challenge
In one remote village in Mustang district, where just four villagers were registered to cast their votes, 20 officials were deployed to deliver election materials as well as to supervise voting and ensure security on election day.
A further 35 eligible voters from the village live in other parts of the country, but recent heavy snowfall has made it difficult for them to return.
Nepal’s law requires citizens to cast their ballots in their registered constituency, which is often where they were born.
Counting of votes, which is done by hand, also usually takes a long time. Every political party would dispatch representatives to the counting centres and they will inspect every open ballot cast before they are counted.
These representatives have sometimes been known to dispute issues like results and the validity of votes, which had previously led to recounts, further delaying the process.
How did the vote take place?
Nearly 19 million people, including almost a million first-time voters, registered to take part in the ballot to elect 275 members of parliament.
The election commission said 60% of registered voters took part in the poll.
Most of the MPs - 165 of them - are elected through first past the post voting, meaning the candidate with the most votes wins the seat. The other 110 MPs are selected via proportional representation, which takes into account the proportion of votes cast for a political party.
This two-system format makes it difficult for any one party to win outright, so whoever comes out top in the election will most likely need to govern in a coalition.
According to the election commission, there were 6,541 candidates in total. Some 3,406 are standing in directly elected seats - more than 1,000 of them aged under 40 - while 3,135 candidates are contesting under the PR system.
Voting started at 07:00 local time (01:15 GMT) and continued until 17:00 local time.
Who are the main players in the Nepal election and where are the key contests?
Reuters
Balen Shah (in sunglasses) is one of the people to watch in this poll
Not only did Balendra Shah take a parliamentary seat from former prime minister Oli, he also won with the highest vote total ever recorded in a Nepali election.
The large number of winning candidates under the age of 40 in this election, including Shah, shows that the political pendulum has firmly swung in favour of the youth, says Amish Raj Mulmi, an analyst based in Kathmandu.
Oli, 74, and his government were forced to resign last September amid mounting public anger at long-entrenched corruption and social inequality in the Himalayan republic.
Shah’s party, the RSP, has also nudged other more established parties out of the running.
The Nepali Congress, the country’s oldest and largest party by membership, was projected as a strong contender only managed 18 seats in the direct vote - a distant second to the RSP, which has 125 seats at last count.
Oli’s party, the Communist Party of Nepal UML, which won the second-largest share of seats in the last election has only won eight seats this time, and the Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist) led by former Maoist leader Prachanda has won seven.
What are the main issues in the Nepal election?
Watch: Three issues that matter to voters in the Nepal election
The authorities said 77 people were killed during last September’s demonstrations, many of them protesters shot by police. Crowds set fire to many buildings, including parliament, the Supreme Court and central government secretariat.
The protests were triggered by a ban on social media but fuelled by anger against corruption, unemployment and economic stagnation.
These were the main issues in the 5 March vote.
Most political parties have put particular focus on issues such as better governance, fighting corruption and reducing employment in their manifestos, which is being widely seen as a nod to the frustrations that led to the toppling of the previous government.
The Nepali Congress, for instance, has proposed holding a high-level investigation into the assets of public office holders since 1990.
This election has important geopolitical ramifications too.
Neighbouring India, which has historically had an outsized role in Nepal’s political history, is watching closely. It has had a fractious relationship with former prime minister KP Sharma Oli in the past.
This is primarily because it sees Oli as someone who has actively pursued a closer relationship with China, India’s rival, during his several terms as prime minister.
China has a major influence in Nepal and will be hoping that any future government is supportive towards its interests in the country, including the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI).
The US has also been playing a role in this election and has been more aligned with India in terms of its strategic objectives, observers say.
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