Nepal’s parliamentary polls on March 5 promise fireworks in Jhapa-5, where KP Sharma Oli, the seasoned ex-premier, faces off against Balen Shah, the social media-savvy former Kathmandu mayor turned political sensation. This electrifying matchup has the nation buzzing, highlighting tensions between establishment power and youthful rebellion.
For Oli, this is familiar territory—his eighth bid from Jhapa-5, where he first won decades ago. Past campaigns saw him barnstorming nationwide for UML, but Balen’s entry has tethered him locally. Media accounts reveal Oli prioritizing his bastion over wider outreach, a tactical pivot in altered political winds.
Balen’s journey is the stuff of headlines: From independent triumph as Kathmandu mayor in 2022 to resigning early this year for this contest. He shattered conventions by defeating party giants, becoming Nepal’s first independent urban mayor. Amid 2025’s deadly youth protests under Oli’s government—claiming 19 lives and injuring hundreds—Balen became an icon for the disaffected young.
His online presence, boasting massive followings, amplifies his candid barbs at authorities, including fights over social media curbs. Supporters hail him as Gen-Z’s champion. Tensions with UML simmered during his mayoral stint, with verbal jabs at Oli now manifesting in direct combat.
Backed by RSP, which eyes him as PM material, Balen represents new forces storming the gates. Jhapa-5’s communist legacy faces scrutiny after 2023’s shifting votes. Among 163,379 voters, swing sentiments could tip the scales.
This isn’t merely a local race; it’s a referendum on Nepal’s future. Oli’s grip on his fortress is tested, while Balen’s momentum could launch him nationally. As March 5 nears, Jhapa-5 embodies the seismic changes reshaping Nepalese democracy.