Nepal: Meet Gen-Z favorite rapper-turned politician 'Balendra Shah', candidate for next PM
Balendra Shah’s National Independent Party is mounting a direct challenge to the long-entrenched Nepali Congress and the Communist Party of Nepal
Nepal is going to elect a new prime minister soon after months of political unrest.
After Nepal's historic youth-led uprising last September that killed 77 people and forced then-Prime Minister K.P. Sharma Oli to resign, a 35-year-old rapper-turned-politician posted a typically terse message to millions of followers on social media.
"Dear Gen Z, the resignation of your killer has come," Balendra Shah—popularly known only as Balen—wrote. "Now your generation will have to lead the country. Be prepared."
Five months on, the musician-turned-politician, who became the mayor of the capital, Kathmandu, in 2022, is poised to become Nepal's next prime minister following the country's first election since the September uprising.
Shah's Rastriya Swatantra Party (RSP) was leading in around 100 seats, far ahead of its main rivals, early counting trends from the election commission showed on Friday, March 6.
The Nepali Congress, currently in second place, has already conceded defeat, and analysts said the RSP's dominant showing means it will likely form the next government.
"Balen Shah is so popular that now buses coming to Kathmandu have stickers on them saying, 'Headed to Balen's city,'" said Bipin Adhikari, a constitutional law expert who teaches at Kathmandu University.
While the final results, covering 165 seats decided by direct vote and 110 through proportional representation, are expected within days.
If Shah is able to take power, it would cap a dramatic rise for a man who entered the public spotlight with rap music critical of the establishment and parleyed his popularity to ascend to high political office.
It would also potentially reshape the politics of Nepal, a small Himalayan nation wedged between China and India, that has long been dominated by a handful of established parties.
Balendra Shah's political term:
Some of Shah's nationwide appeal is driven by the work he has done as the mayor of Kathmandu, where he focused on improving the urban infrastructure, such as waste management, and ensuring the delivery of services like healthcare.
He has also faced criticism, including from Human Rights Watch, for allegedly using police to seize the properties of street vendors and landless people.
Unlike much of Nepal's political elite comprising veterans from older generations, Shah has made it a habit to largely shun the mainstream press.
Instead, it is his prolific social media presence, with over 3.5 million followers on platforms like Facebook, that enables him to connect directly with young Nepalis.
"What makes Balen special is that he stays connected with the youth through his short messages on social media, but it would not be a cakewalk for him after becoming prime minister," said independent political analyst Puranjan Acharya.
Shah's Profile:
Born to a father who practiced traditional Ayurvedic medicine and a homemaker mother, Shah showed an early inclination towards poetry that evolved into a love of rap music, influenced by American artists including Tupac Shakur and Curtis "50 Cent" Jackson, according to an aide.
After securing an undergraduate degree in civil engineering in Nepal, Shah went on to study for a master's degree in structural engineering in southern India, by which time he had already emerged as a rap star in his home country.
His songs, often taking on Nepal's ruling class, struck a chord with many in a country where about 20% of the 30 million population live in grinding poverty.
Released in 2019, one of Shah's best-known songs, "Balidan"—or sacrifice in the Nepali language—has over 12 million views on YouTube.
As a candidate for Nepal's PM:
Last December, Shah joined the RSP, led by former TV host-turned-politician Rabi Lamichhane, as its prime ministerial candidate.
In its manifesto, Shah's RSP has vowed to create 1.2 million jobs and reduce forced migration in an effort to tap into frustration over unemployment and low wages that have pushed millions of Nepalis to search for work overseas.
The party has also pledged to raise Nepal's per capita income from $1,447 to $3,000, more than double the nation's economy to $100 billion GDP, and provide safety nets such as healthcare insurance for the entire population—all within five years.
At the national level, analysts foresee that if he is elected, much of Shah's success will depend on the talent he surrounds himself with to overhaul a moribund administrative system, riven by corruption.
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