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Veena Devi
Veena Devi
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Veena Devi (born 22 April 1967) is an Indian politician serving her 2nd term as current Member of Parliament (MP) from Vaishali (Lok Sabha constituency). She is a former member of Bihar Legislative Assembly from the Gaighat constituency. In the 2019 Indian general election, she contested from Vaishali with Lok Janshakti Party and defeated Raghuvansh Prasad Singh.[1]

Key Information

Political career

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On 2 September 2021, she became the parliamentary chairperson of Lok Janshakti Party replacing Chirag Kumar Paswan.[2][3]

In 2024 Lok Sabha Election Veena Devi won with 566225 votes. She defeated Rashtriya Janata Dal's Vijay Kumar Shukla by 90026 votes.[4][5]

Early life

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Devi was born on 22 April 1967 in Darbhanga, Bihar, to Upendra Prasad Singh and Sabujkala Devi. She is a matriculate.[6] She married Dinesh Prasad Singh, who is the MLC from Muzaffarpur, on 27 April 1984.[6][7][8] They have two sons and two daughters.[6] She lives in Dauadpur village.[9] Her daughter Komal Singh is now serving as MLA from Gaighat Bihar. In 2025, several business media outlets, including News18 India, Times Now and The Daily Jagran, featured her youngest child, Shubham Singh, among Bihar’s leading industrial and business figures as a young ethanol entrepreneur.[10][11][12]


She became an MLA in the Vidhan Sabha election in 2010 in Gaighat with BJP. She had contested the 2010 Vidhan Sabha elections from Ghaighat Seat on the BJP ticket. She was ex Chairperson from Muzaffarpur.[13][14] She became the chairperson of Muzaffarpur district in 2001 and the deputy chairperson in 2006.

See also

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Veena Devi (born 22 April 1967) is an Indian politician and the incumbent Member of Parliament for the in , representing the Lok Janshakti Party (Ram Vilas). Elected to the in 2019 and re-elected in 2024, she previously represented the constituency as a Lok Jan Shakti Party MP from 2014 to 2019. Her political career includes serving as a Member of the from 2010 to 2015, Vice-Chairperson of the Zila Parishad in from 2006 to 2010, and Chairperson of a block in from 2001 to 2006. A matriculate with a background in and , Devi has maintained high parliamentary attendance, exceeding 90% in sessions. She has faced controversies, notably in August 2025 when the issued notices to her and her husband, MLC , over allegations of holding dual Electors Photo Identity Cards (EPICs) in different districts, prompted by claims from opposition leader .

Early life and education

Birth and family background

Veena Devi was born on 22 April 1967 in , , . Her father, Upendra Prasad , and mother, Sabujkala Devi, hailed from a rooted in 's rural landscape, with limited detailing their professions beyond agricultural ties common in the region. No verified information exists on siblings or extended involvement in notable public or political spheres prior to her own career.

Formal education and early influences

Veena Devi completed her by passing the under the . Official parliamentary records and election affidavits consistently describe her highest qualification as matriculate or 10th pass, with no further higher education documented. Her early influences were rooted in a rural upbringing in , , born into a engaged in , which aligned with her self-declared profession as an . This background, in a modest household, emphasized practical skills over extended formal schooling, fostering resilience amid 's agrarian challenges. Specific mentors or intellectual influences beyond familial and environmental factors remain unelaborated in verified accounts.

Personal life

Marriage and immediate family

Veena Devi married , a and member of the from representing , on 27 April 1984. The couple has two sons and two daughters. One son, Chotu Singh, died in a road accident in on 23 September 2024. Their daughter Komal Singh has pursued a political career, contesting elections as a candidate.

Residence and lifestyle

Veena Devi maintains her permanent residence in , , at A-21, Krishnapuri, Bhagwanpur Chowk, NH-28, Thana Sadar, with the postal code 842001. She originates from Daudpur village, located in Paroo police station area of , reflecting her rural roots in the region. As a sitting , Devi utilizes a present address in at 1102, Saraswati Apartment, Dr. B. D. Marg, for parliamentary duties and sessions. This arrangement allows her to balance constituency work in Vaishali with national legislative responsibilities. Devi's listed profession is , indicating a lifestyle intertwined with farming activities in Bihar's agrarian landscape, supplemented by her roles as a and social worker. Her declared movable and immovable assets, totaling approximately ₹46.7 as of her 2024 election , include and residential properties primarily in , underscoring a focus on regional economic interests over urban extravagance.

Political career

Initial entry and party affiliations

Veena Devi entered elective politics in 2014, contesting the Lok Sabha election from the Munger constituency in Bihar on the ticket of the Lok Janshakti Party (LJP). She secured victory with 3,93,987 votes, defeating her nearest rival from the Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD) by a margin of 1,58,342 votes, and served as a Member of Parliament during the 16th Lok Sabha (2014–2019). The LJP, established in 2000 by Ram Vilas Paswan, has maintained an alliance with the National Democratic Alliance (NDA), a coalition dominated by the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), emphasizing social justice and development agendas targeted at Dalit and backward communities in Bihar. Veena Devi's affiliation with LJP positioned her within this NDA framework from the outset of her parliamentary career. In November 2021, following an internal split in the LJP, Veena Devi joined the faction led by Chirag Paswan, which was subsequently renamed Lok Janshakti Party (Ram Vilas) (LJP(RV)). This faction retained the party's NDA membership, distinguishing itself from the rival Lok Janshakti Party faction under Pashupati Kumar Paras. Her continued association with LJP(RV) has sustained her role in NDA-coordinated electoral strategies in Bihar.

2019 Lok Sabha election and first term

Veena Devi contested the 2019 Lok Sabha election from the Vaishali constituency in as the candidate of the (LJP), which was allied with the (NDA). The election in Vaishali occurred on May 12, 2019, as part of the seventh phase of the general elections. She secured victory with 568,215 votes, accounting for 52.9% of the total valid votes polled in the constituency. Her nearest rival, of the (RJD), received 333,631 votes. During her first term in the (2019–2024), Veena Devi maintained a high attendance record of 95% in parliamentary sessions. She participated in 24 debates and raised 109 questions in the , focusing on constituency-specific infrastructure needs, such as the construction of a bridge over the Burhi Gandak River in Vaishali. She introduced no private member bills during this period. Within the LJP, Veena Devi assumed the role of parliamentary chairperson on September 2, 2021, succeeding amid the party's internal factional split. She aligned with the faction led by , which retained the party's seats, including her own. Her tenure emphasized advocacy for local development in Vaishali, a constituency encompassing rural areas prone to flooding and requiring enhanced connectivity.

2024 Lok Sabha election and second term

Veena Devi contested the 2024 Lok Sabha election from the Vaishali constituency as the candidate of the Lok Janshakti Party (Ram Vilas), an ally of the National Democratic Alliance (NDA). Polling in Vaishali occurred on June 1, 2024, during the seventh and final phase of the general elections. She secured victory with 567,043 votes, comprising 566,225 votes and 818 postal votes, defeating candidate by a margin of 89,634 votes. This result represented a 52.07% vote share for Devi, reflecting strong support in the constituency amid NDA's overall performance in . Following her re-election, Veena Devi began her second term as from Vaishali in the 18th , which convened on June 24, 2024. Her tenure has focused on continuing constituency development initiatives, building on priorities from her first term such as infrastructure and local welfare schemes aligned with NDA government programs.

Key legislative activities and constituency work

During her tenure in the (2019–2024), Veena Devi maintained a 95% attendance record and participated in 24 debates, while posing 109 questions to the government on matters including , , and local development. In the 18th Lok Sabha (2024–present), her attendance stood at 98%, with participation in 2 debates and 1 question asked as of the latest available data. She has not introduced any private member's bills in either term. Veena Devi has served on several parliamentary committees, including the Standing Committee on Personnel, Public Grievances, (from September 2020), the Standing Committee on , and (2019–2020), and the Committee on Industry (from September 2024). She is also a member of the Joint Committee on Salaries and Allowances of Members of (from March 2025) and has been a permanent special invitee to consultative committees for the Ministries of Petroleum and Natural Gas, Commerce and Industry (from 2019), and Home Affairs (from October 2024). Notable interventions include a March 2020 debate urging the construction of a bridge over the Burhi Gandak River in Vaishali to improve connectivity, and participation in the August 2024 discussion on Demands for Grants under the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare. In her constituency work for Vaishali, Veena Devi has prioritized and economic issues through parliamentary questions and . For instance, she queried the government on incomplete railway projects in , Vaishali, and Sugauli, seeking updates on , track doubling, and station developments to enhance regional transport. Her efforts reflect a focus on addressing Bihar-specific bottlenecks in connectivity and agriculture, aligning with broader NDA priorities for , though specific outcomes from MPLADS fund allocations remain undocumented in public parliamentary records.

Controversies and criticisms

Dual voter ID allegations (2025)

In August 2025, Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD) leader Tejashwi Yadav alleged that Veena Devi, the Lok Janshakti Party (Ram Vilas) MP from Vaishali, possessed two Elector Photo Identity Cards (EPICs), claiming she had submitted separate enumeration forms with differing signatures during the Election Commission of India's Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls in Bihar. Yadav further accused her husband, JD(U) MLC Dinesh Prasad Singh, of holding dual EPICs as well, describing the entries as duplicate voter registrations across two constituencies and labeling it electoral fraud ahead of Bihar's assembly elections. These claims were part of broader RJD criticisms of the NDA coalition and questions about the impartiality of voter list revisions, with Yadav highlighting over 96 crore registered voters in Bihar and potential irregularities in a small percentage of entries. The Election Commission of India responded on August 14, 2025, by issuing formal notices to Veena Devi and Dinesh Singh, directing them to explain the dual EPIC numbers and duplicate entries in electoral rolls of multiple constituencies. The notices, served by the Electoral Registration Officer, required responses within specified timelines and warned of potential deletion of duplicate entries or legal penalties under the Representation of the People Act, 1950, which prohibits multiple registrations and carries fines or imprisonment for violations. Notably, the ECI also issued a similar notice to Yadav himself for an alleged duplicate EPIC in Patna Sadar, underscoring the agency's routine scrutiny during SIR processes rather than selective targeting. As of October 2025, no final resolution or admissions of wrongdoing have been publicly reported from the involved parties, with the matter remaining under ECI investigation amid ongoing political rhetoric. reflects common issues in India's voter roll maintenance, where clerical errors or unreported address changes can lead to duplicates, though intentional dual registration constitutes a cognizable offense.

Associations with regional political dynamics

Veena Devi's political profile is linked to Bihar's entrenched through her husband, , a JD(U) MLC described as a strongman figure with influence in northern constituencies. This familial connection positions her within the NDA's broader strategy, where cross-party alliances among family members from JD(U) and LJP(RV) facilitate vote consolidation among OBC groups in competitive regions like Vaishali and . In Vaishali, a constituency marked by the sway of bahubalis (strongmen) and caste-based mobilization, Devi's repeated candidacies reflect the NDA's reliance on such networks to counter the opposition's appeals to Yadavs, Kushwahas, and Nishads. Her 2024 victory, securing 567,043 votes for LJP(RV), underscored the effectiveness of this approach against RJD's bid to fragment upper-caste support via a candidate. Opposition figures have critiqued these ties as perpetuating dynastic and muscle-driven dynamics in Bihar's "badlands," where personal influence often overshadows developmental agendas, though Devi's camp emphasizes her independent electoral mandate within the NDA framework.

Political ideology and public stances

Alignment with NDA coalition priorities

Veena Devi, representing the Lok Janshakti Party (Ram Vilas)—a key ally in the National Democratic Alliance (NDA)—has demonstrated alignment with coalition priorities through consistent parliamentary engagement and support for major legislative initiatives led by the BJP-led government. During her first term in the 17th Lok Sabha (2019–2024), she maintained a 95% attendance record, surpassing the national average of 79%, and participated in 24 debates while raising 109 questions, often focused on agricultural insurance claims and constituency-specific development issues that complement NDA emphases on rural economy and farmer welfare schemes like Pradhan Mantri Fasal Bima Yojana. In her second term in the 18th (2024–present), Devi's attendance rose to 98%, exceeding state and national benchmarks, though her participation (2 instances) and questions asked (1) remained modest. She contributed to discussions on the (128th Amendment) Bill, 2023—popularly known as the Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam—reserving one-third of seats for women in and state legislatures, a flagship NDA measure passed with overwhelming support (454 votes in favor, 2 against) on September 20, 2023. Her involvement in this , alongside other NDA MPs, underscored endorsement of the coalition's push for gender equity in governance without recorded abstentions or opposition. No instances of voting against or abstaining from NDA-backed bills on economic reforms, , or constitutional matters appear in her record, reflecting party-line fidelity amid LJP(RV)'s reaffirmed commitment to the alliance under Chirag Paswan's leadership.

Views on Bihar-specific issues

Veena Devi has frequently addressed as a critical challenge in , emphasizing its impact on and livelihoods. In a 2018 Lok Sabha speech, she highlighted the dual threats of floods and droughts affecting residents, noting significant farmer losses due to inadequate and relief measures. She reiterated this concern in 2020 during zero hour, demanding special central assistance for flood victims across her Vaishali constituency and the entire state to mitigate ongoing distress from recurrent inundations by rivers like the Gandak and Burhi Gandak. On infrastructure, Devi has advocated for enhanced connectivity to bolster in flood-prone areas. In March 2020, she urged the construction of a bridge over the Burhi Gandak River in Vaishali to improve access, reduce isolation during monsoons, and facilitate trade and emergency response, aligning with broader calls for resilient transport networks in Bihar's riverine terrain. Her positions reflect a focus on central intervention for management and physical , consistent with NDA priorities for Bihar's growth, though she has not publicly detailed stances on issues like labor migration or caste-based reservations beyond constituency-level appeals.

References

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