Gabriel Mueller
Balendra Shah, a 35-year-old former rapper and mayor of Kathmandu, was sworn in as Nepal’s youngest-ever prime minister – and Nepal’s 15th change of government since 2012 – on 27 March 2026 following a landslide victory for the centrist Rastriya Swatantra Party (RSP). The parliamentary elections were the first since former prime minister K.P. Sharma Oli was forced to resign after student-led protests in September 2025. This is the first time that the RSP has been elected to power, and the first time that a single party has formed a majority government since 1999.
The RSP’s victory marks a shift in the political landscape away from Nepal’s long-established traditional parties that have governed since parliamentary democracy was restored in 1990. For over a decade, power has rotated between the three leaders of the Communist Party of Nepal (Unified Marxist–Leninist) (CPN-UML), the Nepali Congress (NC) and the Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist Centre). This result reflects a powerful public mandate for change, echoing the demands of the Generation-Z movement that triggered the election. Overall voter turnout was 60%, similar to the previous 2022 election, with over 11 million out of the nearly 19m electorate.