The Nitish Kumar government today won the crucial floor test in the Bihar Assembly, securing 131 votes against the opposition's 108.
Four members in the 243-member house could not vote, reducing the total strength of the house during the trust vote to 239.
With the effective strength of the House reduced to 239 during voting, Bihar's new government needed 120 votes to win the confidence vote.
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Speaker Vijay Kumar Chaudhary did not participate in the voting.
Chief Minister Nitish Kumar and Deputy Chief Minister Sushil Kumar Modi did not take part in the voting as both are members of the Legislative Council. However, they were present in the house.
In the voting under lobby division, members in favour of the confidence vote went inside one lobby where they signed a register; those against it headed for another lobby and signed a register.
At the end, the speaker announced the result of the trust vote, with 131 in favour of the NDA and 108 against it.
The 131 votes in favour of Nitish Kumar comprised JD(U) 70, BJP 52, HAM 1, RLSP 2, LJP 2 and Independent 4.
The 108 votes against it comprised RJD 79, Congress 26 and CPI-ML 3.
The speaker's effort to decide the fate of the confidence motion through voice vote failed twice following shouting from both the treasury and the opposition benches.
Senior RJD MLA Abdul Bari Siddiqui demanded secret voting but was rejected by the speaker.
At the end of the confidence vote, the speaker announced its adjournment for an indefinite period.
The Bihar Assembly held a one-day special session today for taking up the trust vote by the JD(U) and NDA coalition government.
Speeches of senior leaders of various parties on the confidence motion moved by the chief minister were frequently disrupted by members of rival parties.
RJD leader Tejashwi Prasad Yadav, former deputy chief minister and the son of Lalu Prasad Yadav, started the discussion on confidence motion. The Congress fielded its legislature party leader Sadanand Singh.
Modi spoke on behalf of the BJP while the chief minister spoke last.
Kumar, 66, was sworn in yesterday, returning to the National Democratic Alliance after four years. The day earlier, he had resigned as chief minister, breaking ranks with his allies -- Lalu Yadav's RJD party and the Congress.
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