
Bikram Election Result: Bikram, on the outskirts of Patna, blends agrarian roots with suburban growth. With 69% turnout, the 2025 polls may show if caste loyalties yield to development-driven politics.
Bikram Election Result 2025 OUT: Bikram—just west of Patna city and straddling the edge of urban expansion—is historically agrarian and caste-anchored, but is increasingly influenced by commuter development, small-industry clusters and young semi-urban voters. With the counting scheduled for 14 November 2025, the question is whether the legacy rural-caste structures will hold, or if emerging urban-fringe issues—like connectivity, youth jobs and peri-urban infrastructure—will determine the result.
Siddharth Saurav of BJP has become the new MLA of Bikram.
Siddharth Saurav has won the Bihar Vidhan Sabha Election from Bikram and has become then newest MLA with total votes of 1,01,189 and margin of 5,601.
Polling for Bikram was held on 6 November 2025 (Phase 1). The result (counting) is set for 14 November 2025.
The current MLA of Bikram constituency is Siddharth Saurav (Indian National Congress as of 2020).
In 2010, the seat was won by Anil Kumar (BJP) with ~38,965 votes.
In 2015, Siddharth (INC) retained the seat with ~94,088 votes (~54.4%).
In 2020, Siddharth Saurav (INC) won with ~86,177 votes (~47.71%) defeating independent Anil Kumar (~50,717 votes) by a margin of ~35,460 votes.
For 2025, Bikram recorded a voter turnout of about 69.09% during Phase 1 polling.
The margin in 2020 was around 35,460 votes.
Bikram is Constituency No. 191, in Patna district, Bihar. It falls under the Pataliputra Lok Sabha constituency.
| CANDIDATES | Party |
| Ajeet Kumar | Janshakti Jata Dal |
| Anil Kumar | INC |
| Chandan Kumar | IND |
| Chandan Sharma | Jagrook Janta Party |
| Dhurakheli Ravidas | Indian National Socialistic Action Forces |
| Mantu Kumar | Jan Suraaj Party |
| Rajiv Kumar Singh | IND |
| Ram Pravesh Yadav | BSP |
| Shambhu Prasad Sharma | Hindustan Vikas Dal |
| Siddharth Saurav | BJP |
The Bikram Assembly constituency has a total of approximately 3,05,786 registered voters, including 1,58,275 male voters, 1,47,497 female voters, and 14 voters from the third gender.
Bikram, located in Bihar’s Patna, has been part of India’s electoral landscape since it became an Assembly constituency in 1967.
The pincode for the Bikram constituency is 801104.
Official winner list is awaited. Given the high turnout (~69%) and semi-urban shifts, the outcome will reflect how commuter-belt seats near Patna are trending.
Bikram sits at the transition zone: once firmly agrarian with caste-anchored patterns, it’s now experiencing spill-over from Patna’s urban belt, a commuting workforce, and new livelihood profiles. These shifts bring fresh voter priorities—better transport links (to Patna), small-industry jobs, digital access, and flood resilience (due to nearby terrain).
The strong turnout (~69%) signals engagement. If Bikram shows tighter contest or unexpected result in 2025, it may mark how seats on Patna’s outskirts are moving from identity-driven politics to performance-based contests.