He is not just under attack from his opponent Shiv Chandra Ram of the RJD, but also by his uncle Paras.
Bihar's Hajipur seat was once synonymous with Ram Vilas Paswan, who entered Parliament for eight times from the constituency and made an entry into the Guinness World Records by getting 89 per cent votes in 1977.
Fast forward to 2024, his son Chirag Paswan is contesting from this seat. After Ram Vilas's death in 2020, a fight to claim his legacy broke out between Chirag and uncle Pashupati Kumar Paras.
While Paras represents this seat, Chirag -- a two-time MP from Jamui and head of the Lok Janshakti Party-Ram Vilas (LJP-RV) -- struck a deal with the Bharatiya Janata Party. As part of the alliance, Chirag is now contesting from Hajipur while his uncle, also an ally of the BJP, has been left high and dry. In protest, Paras quit the Union cabinet and is not even taking part in election campaigning.
It's a two-front war for Chirag. As he is not just under attack from his opponent Shiv Chandra Ram of the Rashtriya Janata Dal, but also by his uncle Paras. Election to this seat will be held in the fifth phase on May 20.
Addressing a public meeting in Hajipur on Monday, May 13, Narendra Modi reminisced about his association with the late Paswan, his former Cabinet colleague, and urged the electorate to ensure that Chirag's victory margin beat that of his father's record-breaking wins.
Ram Vilas first won from Hajipur in 1977, securing 89.3 per cent of the votes polled, and again on seven more occasions.
In 1989, he cornered 84 per cent of the votes polled. By the 2004 Lok Sabha, Ram Vilas had exited the Janata Dal to contest on the symbol of his Lok Janshakti Party.
He lost the seat in 1984 to the Congress's Ram Ratan Ram in the wake of the Congress wave. And also in 2009, when he lost to the Janata Dal-United's Ram Sundar Das.
In that election, Paswan's LJP and the RJD had an alliance against the JD-U-BJP alliance.
In the subsequent elections in 2014, Ram Vilas won the seat in alliance with the BJP, later crediting son Chirag for convincing him to ally with that party.
He vacated the seat in 2019 for his younger brother Paras while Chirag contested and won from the Jamui seat in 2014 and 2019.
Incidentally, the Raghopur assembly seat, represented by the RJD's Lalu Prasad, Rabri Devi successively since 1995, barring 2010, and now by their son Tejashwi Yadav in 2015 and 2020, falls within the Hajipur Lok Sabha seat in Vaishali district.
'2024 won't be a repeat of 2019'
Why Paras Surrendered To Mo-Shah
Ram Vilas Paswan's Final Throw Of Dice
Next-gen politicians battle it out for Samastipur
'NDA Will Win 30-32 Seats In Bihar'