Monday’s Rajya Sabha elections did more than fill a few vacancies in the upper house. They told a familiar political story in a new setting, where numbers, not noise, decide the outcome.Due to absent MLAs in Bihar, the opposition lost the seat which it should have won. Cross-voting in Odisha rewrote an established calculus. And in Haryana, illegal ballots and defections threw what should have been a straight contest into trouble at midnight.Individually, these may appear as state-specific disruptions. Overall, they outline a deeper and more enduring pattern. The Bharatiya Janata Party’s (BJP) growing “mastery” over the Rajya Sabha numbers game and the opposition’s inability to maintain its hold when it matters most.This is not a new story. This has been unfolding quietly but decisively since 2014.
upper house paradox
When the BJP came to power in 2014 with a decisive majority in the Lok Sabha, it no longer had the same dominance in the Rajya Sabha. The Upper House, by design, is insulated from electoral waves. Its members are elected by state legislatures, and their terms are staggered, ensuring continuity and preventing sudden changes.This meant that even though the BJP had overwhelming strength in the Lower House, it remained a minority in the Upper House for years. That imbalance matters!
Composition of Rajya Sabha
Unlike the Lok Sabha, where a majority can push legislation through relatively easily, the Rajya Sabha demands negotiation, persuasion and sometimes political ingenuity. This became both an obstacle and an opportunity for the BJP. A hindrance because it could not make laws unilaterally, and an opportunity because it forced the party to develop a different kind of political strategy.
slow climb
From 2014 onwards, the BJP began to make steady gains in the Rajya Sabha through a mix of electoral expansion and strategic positioning. Each state election victory, over time, translated into incremental gains in the upper house.States like Uttar Pradesh, Maharashtra, Assam and later parts of the Northeast became important for this expansion. But no state epitomizes this system better than Uttar Pradesh.With 403 MLAs, Uttar Pradesh is the largest contributor sending 31 members to the Rajya Sabha. After the BJP’s landslide victory in the 2017 assembly elections, it dramatically improved its Upper House numbers through successive election cycles.This is the basic mechanism of the Rajya Sabha, which mandates political parties to control state assemblies, and over time, it reshapes the composition of the upper house in favor of the party with the most seats in the state assemblies.Yet, even though the BJP’s numbers have improved, it has not been able to consistently cross the majority mark on its own. And yet, the law continued to move forward.
Non NDA support to BJP
How does the Rajya Sabha election actually work?
Rajya Sabha elections are not direct. Legislators vote using proportional representation through the single transferable vote (STV) system.
Rajya Sabha formula
And this is where the system becomes politically sensitive.A handful of cross-votes, a few abstentions, or even an incorrectly marked ballot could overturn the results. Events this week in Bihar, Odisha and Haryana show how delicate and unstable these calculations can be.The heart of this system lies in a deceptively simple formula.An example from Uttar Pradesh:
How are votes counted in Rajya Sabha?
Managing numbers: BJP’s strategy
Over the past decade, the BJP has consistently demonstrated an ability to deal with the complexities of the Rajya Sabha’s numbers game, relying not on any one strategy but on a “combination of approaches” that create a working majority even without a formal majority. A key pillar of this has been the steady expansion of its electoral base, with victories in state assemblies translating into incremental gains in the Upper House over time. Where this has fallen short, the party has forged strategic, often issue-based understandings with regional players such as the Biju Janata Dal (BJD), the YSR Congress Party (YSRCP) and the AIADMK, whose support, though not always formal, has proved decisive in crucial votes.
Non NDA support to BJP
Also, the BJP has benefited from cross-voting and dissent within the opposition parties, a recurring feature of Rajya Sabha elections that has tilted the results in its favour, as was seen in the recent Odisha contest. The party has also shown flexibility in candidate selection, sometimes supporting independent candidates or accommodating allies to maximize its chances, while complementing these efforts with careful floor management inside the House. By scheduling the introduction of key legislations, ensuring attendance when important and steering debates while keeping a close eye on the arithmetic, the BJP has repeatedly succeeded in getting bills passed despite not having a clear majority.
Passing laws ‘without majority’
Over the past decade, the BJP has been successful in getting several key laws passed through a balanced mix of political support, timing and procedural tactics. This often involves support from non-NDA regional parties, boycotts and walkouts by sections of the opposition, and careful scheduling of debates when the numbers are favourable. For example, during the passage of the Muslim Women (Protection of Rights on Marriage) Act, 2019, the government did not have the required numbers on its own, but abstention by parties like JD(U), AIADMK and TRS reduced the effective strength of the House, allowing the bill to be passed by a comfortable margin. Similarly, the Jammu and Kashmir Reorganization Bill, 2019, which paved the way for the abrogation of Article 370, received active support from parties like Biju Janata Dal, YSR Congress Party and AIADMK, even though they were not part of the formal alliance with the BJP. The Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA), 2019 followed a comparable pattern, with regional parties supporting the government and helping it secure a tightly contested majority. In other cases, procedural devices have played a role, as was seen during the passage of the farm laws in 2020, where a voice vote was used amid the opposition’s demands for division, effectively bypassing a potentially uncertain total. Walkouts have also often lowered the voting threshold, making what could have been close contests for the government manageable. Overall, these examples highlight a recurring paradox that shows how a government without a formal majority in the upper house has rarely found its legislative agenda blocked, largely due to a combination of opposition fragmentation and strategic floor management.
Opposition’s missed moment
If the BJP’s story is one of adaptation and strategy, the opposition’s story is one of missed opportunities.Over the past decade, the opposition, at least numerically, had the ability to influence legislation in the Rajya Sabha. It could demand deeper investigations, negotiate amendments, or even block controversial bills. That potential has often gone unrealized.The reasons are structural as well as political:
- Disintegration among regional and national parties
- factionalism within parties
- coordination failure at critical moments
- Strategic mistakes like walkouts and absences
The Haryana case is particularly revealing. Despite having substantial numbers, the Congress saw its margin dramatically reduced due to cross-voting and illegal ballot papers, narrowly missing out on a comfortable victory.In Bihar, one seat had to be paid due to absence. Cross voting changed the mathematics in Odisha. These are not isolated failures, but recurring patterns.
Cross-voting: Symptom of a deeper issue
Cross-voting has long been a part of Indian politics, but its repeated impact in Rajya Sabha elections points to deeper issues of party discipline and internal cohesion.In tightly contested elections, even a handful of defector votes can change the outcome. For the BJP, such moments have often turned into windfalls. For the opposition, he has exposed organizational weaknesses.Recent elections have once again highlighted how fragile opposition unity can be under pressure.
Why does Rajya Sabha still matter?
In public discussion, the Lok Sabha often dominates the attention. But the Rajya Sabha remains important to India’s parliamentary system.It works like this:
- legislative check on the executive
- A forum to represent the interests of the state
- A continuing body that ensures institutional stability
In principle, it is designed to deepen debate and improve the law. In practice, its effectiveness depends on how political actors engage with it.
Why do Rajya Sabha elections matter?
power beyond numbers
The BJP’s experience in the Rajya Sabha over the past decade offers a comprehensive view of how parliamentary politics works beyond simple arithmetic. Power in the Upper House is not determined by numbers alone, but also by how those numbers are mobilized, negotiated and sometimes divided among parties. Despite starting from a numerical disadvantage, the BJP has used issue-based support, timing and floor coordination to push its legislative agenda. Besides, this phase has also highlighted the challenges before the opposition. While opposition parties often have the combined strength to influence or slow down legislation, differences in political priorities, regional considerations, and coordination gaps have limited their ability to act as a cohesive block. In many instances, this has either resulted in support from non-NDA parties or reduced resistance through abstention, leading to results in favor of the government. Therefore, the overall trend reflects not only the ruling party’s strategy but also the opposition’s struggle to translate its numerical presence into sustained parliamentary influence.Some MLAs absent in Bihar. A handful of cross votes in Odisha. Illegal ballot papers and factional rifts in Haryana. Each episode reinforces the same underlying truth that discipline and coordination matter as much as numbers in Rajya Sabha arithmetic.The Rajya Sabha was envisioned as a balance, a House where legislation would be tested through debate and consensus. Over the past decade, it has become a place where strategy often dictates structure as well as results.It is possible that BJP may not have its majority in the Upper House during this period. But when it matters, ways have been found to make it happen again and again.And as recent events show, the difference between victory and defeat in this House is often not of a broad mandate, but of a handful of votes that stick, go astray or do not turn up!





