Nepal elections: Balen Shah defeats KP Sharma Oli by nearly 50,000 votes
Balen defeated four-time PM KP Sharma Oli by a huge margin of about 50,000 votes.
PTI
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Balendra Shah shows a certificate at the Election Commission premises after winning the constituency in the Nepal general elections (PTI)
Kathmandu, Mar
Balendra Shah 'Balen', the rapper-turned-politician who won Kathmandu's 2022 mayoral polls as an independent, has become the face of a generational change, symbolising a break from Nepal's traditional parties.
Popular
as 'Balen,' the prime ministerial candidate of the Rastriya Swatantra Party
(RSP) defeated four-time prime minister KP Sharma Oli, the chair of Nepal's
legacy party, the Communist Party of Nepal (Unified Marxist–Leninist) --
CPN-UML -- by a huge margin of about 50,000 votes in Jhapa-5 constituency on
Saturday.
The
35-year-old engineer was a popular choice to lead the interim government after
Gen Z youths toppled the KP Sharma Oli-led coalition government in September
last year, following two-day nationwide violent protests against corruption and
a ban on social media.
But
Balen declined then to lead the interim government, saying he would rather head
the government by contesting the parliamentary election for a full term.
In
January, he joined the newly formed Rastriya Swatantra Party (RSP), led by Ravi
Lamichhane, and was soon declared the party's prime ministerial candidate.
As the
Kathmandu Metropolitan City Mayor, Balen is credited with sweeping reform
programmes and the beautification of the metropolis.
In his resignation
letter, Balen said, as the Mayor of Kathmandu, “I have performed my duty in an
honest manner as far as possible for the welfare of the metropolis and its
inhabitants.”
Born in
Kathmandu in a family originally from Madhesh province, Balen is the youngest
son of Ram Narayan Shah, an Ayurved practitioner, and Dhruvadevi Shah, a
homemaker. He was keen on music and poetry from a young age and turned to rap
music during his education days.
After
completing a Civil Engineering degree from Kathmandu, Balen did his Master's in
Structural Engineering from the Visvesvaraya Technological University (VTU) in
Karnataka.
He
married Sabina Kafle in 2018, and the couple has a 2023-born daughter.
Balen's
official YouTube page (@BalenShah with 'Rapper, Lyricist, Music Composer' as
his description) lists about a million subscribers.
Balen
released his first single song, 'Sadak Balak', in 2012, when he was one year
short of his matriculation. The very next year, he participated in a YouTube
battle rap series, gaining widespread recognition across Nepal's music lovers.
“His
songs always reflect the ground struggle, social themes and raise issues such
as corruption and inequality that matter the most for common Nepali,” said a
college student.
It was
this popularity that he capitalised on to enter politics and successfully
contested the mayoral 2022 polls with his campaign slogan for 'change',
targeting youngsters, most of them his followers on his social media platforms
and were getting fed up with traditional parties' musical chair politics.
No
wonder, when K P Sharma Oli banned social media in Nepal in 2025, Balen was
amongst the prominent voices to protest the move.
Earlier,
months after he won as an independent, Balen was named in the 'Top 100 Emerging
Leaders of 2023' by Time magazine, which described how he ran his campaign
using multiple social media platforms “to harness voter anger over the status
quo.”
“In a
city still reeling from a deadly 2015 earthquake, Shah’s campaign promises were
simple but offered desperately needed fixes: better waste disposal and
sanitation, safe drinking water, clean roads, and the preservation of cultural
heritage alongside urban development,” the magazine said.
However,
his mayoral tenure was not without controversy. “He faced flak when there were
widespread demolitions in the capital. He was also accused of not sending a
fire brigade when Gen Z protesters resorted to arson,” said a critique.
Balen
chose the Jhapa-5 constituency in eastern Nepal's Koshi province to take on the
four-time prime minister Oli, who is also the Communist Party of Nepal (Unified
Marxist–Leninist) chairman. While Balen represented the emerging youth force of
Nepal, Oli was the face of the conservative old guard.
People
identified Balen with his signature dark goggles and black blazer most of the
time, but it was a small metal bell, the RSP symbol, that he carried to his
political rallies and used during his speeches to warn the opposition.
Immediately
after he joined the RSP, Balen chose to address a public meeting, calling it a
'Parivartan Udghosh Sabha' (Change Declaration Gathering) in Janakpur and spoke
in Maithili to highlight his personal connection with the Madhesh province.
Expressing
dissatisfaction that even after the introduction of federalism, power remained
centralised in the capital city, Kathmandu, Balen said, “You should be
travelling to Kathmandu to visit lord Pashupatinath or Swoyambhu Stupa, but not
for government works.”
The
sentiment was reflected in the RSP's manifesto, called the 100-point commitment
paper, which promised online government service delivery to be provided to the
people and building a neutral, professional and accountable public service
system by disassociating bureaucracy from politics.
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