Virtual rallies amid bad weather
Heavy rain disrupted scheduled flights and choppers, forcing Shah to address several campaign meetings virtually from Patna. He spoke to voters in Gopalganj, Ujiyarpur (Samastipur) and Vaishali via video links, reiterating the pledge to revive defunct mills and boost farm incomes.
Why reopen sugar mills matters
Bihar’s closed sugar mills have long been a source of local economic distress, affecting sugarcane farmers, mill workers and allied industries. Shah framed the promise as an effort to restore jobs, increase ethanol and sugarcane value-chains, and provide farmers better returns including higher minimum support and targeted welfare transfers highlighted by the Centre.
Political context and campaign rhetoric
Shah used the occasion to contrast the NDA’s record with what he called the “jungle raj” of past regimes, naming incidents and leaders from earlier decades to underline his point. He accused opposition leaders of romanticising an era of lawlessness while pitching the NDA’s development narrative to voters.
Details of the promise
The Home Minister pointed to recent steps such as the revival of specific mills (citing examples where the Centre or state helped restart operations) and said the government would systematically work to restart remaining closed units over a five-year horizon. Shah tied the announcement to larger farm-support measures, including higher MSP-like figures for paddy and expanded direct benefit transfers for women and small farmers.
Operational and economic challenges
Reopening idled sugar mills requires capital investment, resolution of legacy liabilities, procurement of raw material linkages, and often structural changes in management. While political promises map a direction, the practical revival would typically involve state-industry partnerships, debt restructuring and viability plans under industrial policy frameworks. Observers say reviving mills can boost rural employment but will demand clear timelines, funding plans and monitoring. (Analysis based on industrial revival precedents.)
What local leaders and voters expect
Local BJP organisers and campaign managers welcomed the pledge and say it could galvanise rural voters dependent on sugarcane livelihoods. Opposition leaders, however, urged evidence of concrete plans and alarmed that rhetoric must translate into budgets and execution after votes are cast. Both sides are expected to press the Centre and state machinery for detailed implementation schedules if the NDA returns to power.
What happens next
Shah’s announcement is part of a broader campaign push across Bihar in the run-up to the two-phase assembly polls on November 6 and 11. Voters and analysts will watch whether the promise is picked up in formal election manifestos and subsequent budgetary allocations. For official campaign updates and election schedules, see the Election Commission of India and Press Information Bureau portals.
