Rahul’s Vanishing Act: Can Congress Survive Bihar Without Its Star?
“Rahul Gandhi’s Sudden Silence Raises Questions as Bihar’s Political Heat Intensifies.”
Paromita Das
New Delhi, 30th October: As the scorching political season descends on Bihar, one face remains conspicuously absent from the electoral battlefield. With Prime Minister Narendra Modi rallying crowds, Amit Shah strategizing deep in the heartlands, and Tejashwi Yadav’s emotional charges galvanizing supporters—all eyes search for Rahul Gandhi. Once the “hero of the people” in Congress’s Voter Adhikar Yatra, Rahul’s abrupt disappearance from Bihar’s campaign trail has become the biggest headline before polls. What does this silence mean for both the Congress and the Mahagathbandhan at this critical juncture?
Rahul Gandhi’s Missing Footprints: A Campaign in Limbo

Rahul Gandhi’s Voter Adhikar Yatra in early September briefly revived hopes in Bihar. Traversing 1,300 km and 25 districts, the Congress leader connected directly with ordinary voters, championed “vote rights,” and accused the NDA of “vote chori.” His motorbike rides and candid conversations brought an air of grassroots resurgence to the Congress, cementing alliances with faces like Tejashwi Yadav and Hemant Soren.
Yet, just as momentum peaked, Rahul Gandhi vanished from the scene. While the BJP’s top leadership unleashed a coordinated campaign blitz, the Congress’s campaign splintered into recycled yatra clips and digital appeals, lacking the leader’s energizing presence.
The Electoral Chessboard: Allies, Rallies, and Relevance

The opposition’s Mahagathbandhan, with Tejashwi Yadav as its chief ministerial candidate, has focused its narrative as much around “youth” and “change” as the absence of Congress’s top star. The party’s own crisis is evident: contesting fewer seats than in 2020 (down from 70 to 61) and plagued by abysmal strike rates and internal rifts.
Discontent erupted within Congress over ticket distribution, as accusations of favoritism led to slogans echoing Rahul’s own campaign against the NDA. Allies who once shared the campaign stage have drifted. Hemant Soren declined to contest, while every day without Rahul on the ground left Congress candidates scrambling for both visibility and credibility.
Rahul’s Calendar: Miles Away from Bihar

After the Patna rally, Rahul Gandhi made five public appearances—none in Bihar. Instead, he appeared for brief moments: eating pizza in Gurugram, warning against the “erosion of scientific thinking” in studies abroad, and rolling laddoos at a Delhi sweet shop.
Congress officials promise a post-Chhath “full-throttle campaign,” with Rahul, Priyanka Gandhi Vadra, and Mallikarjun Kharge set to tour Bihar in the final days. But for local party workers, the delay feels less like strategic timing and more like loss of relevance. Even the planned joint rally with Tejashwi in Muzaffarpur is seen as too little, too late.
Optics and Opponents: BJP’s Grand Spectacle vs. Congress’s Lingering Doubt

While Rahul remained absent, the BJP transformed Bihar into a campaigning battleground. Prime Minister Modi and Amit Shah led massive rallies. Yogi Adityanath was scheduled for more than 20 appearances, and every corner of Bihar echoed with National Democratic Alliance slogans.
On the ground, Tejashwi Yadav’s relentless schedule and emotional messaging filled Congress’s void with grassroots energy. Prashant Kishor’s Jan Suraaj Yatra added intellectual heft, while Rahul Gandhi’s campaign seemed to run on borrowed nostalgia and social media throwbacks.
Calculated Strategy or Missed Opportunity?

Rahul Gandhi’s prolonged absence has divided opinion. Congress’s high command touts his late entry as part of a carefully calibrated strategy—saving energy for the campaign’s endgame. But in Bihar’s gritty election landscape, presence often trumps planning. Voters crave visible leadership: handshakes, rallies, direct appeals.
In a coalition fighting for credibility amid growing regionalism and strong local rivals, Rahul’s silence risks ceding more ground to both partners and opponents. Political capital, built on momentum and connection, shrinks with each lost day. Congress’s internal discord and public uncertainty have only exacerbated doubts about its ability to mount a serious challenge in Bihar.
The Sound of Absence in Bihar’s Polls
As polling days approach, Bihar’s voters must choose amidst a crowded field—where grand rallies, emotional appeals, and careful strategies compete for attention. Within this din, Rahul Gandhi’s silence is the loudest voice missing. Whether his last-minute reappearance will reignite the Congress or further cement its marginal status, only time will tell.
In modern Bharatiya elections, absence is itself a political act—sometimes a strategic retreat, sometimes a sign of crisis. For the Congress, and for Rahul Gandhi, Bihar’s results may well reflect the cost of vanishing when it mattered most.