RSP Bhupadev Shah Nepal Politics Chitwan Bharatpur Manifesto General Convention

RSP’s Bhupadev Shah Says the Party Is Ready to “Build the Nation”

At RSP’s first convention in Bharatpur, General Secretary Bhupadev Shah urged confidence in an RSP-led government and said the party remains committed to its election manifesto.

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Rastriya Swatantra Party General Secretary Bhupadev Shah used the party’s first convention in Bharatpur to deliver a clear message: the RSP is not just preparing for politics, it is positioning itself as a party of government. Speaking in Chitwan at the inaugural convention of the party’s Bharatpur Metropolitan Committee, Shah urged citizens to stay confident that an RSP-led administration would drive national development.

A message of confidence and continuity

Shah framed the party’s ambitions around delivery, saying the RSP remains committed to the promises it made in its election manifesto. His remarks were aimed at reassuring supporters that the party’s public commitments are still central to its political identity, even as it expands its organizational footprint.

The convention in Bharatpur also highlighted how the RSP is trying to strengthen its local structure while building momentum at the national level. The event came as the party continues preparing for broader internal and electoral organizing, including its first general convention in Chitwan.

Why this matters for the RSP

The RSP has built its brand around disruption, reform, and a cleaner style of politics, and Shah’s speech reinforced that image. By emphasizing national development and manifesto-based politics, the party is signaling that it wants to be judged not only on protest or popularity, but on governance and implementation.

That shift matters because parties that grow quickly often face a credibility test: can they move from outsider energy to governing discipline? Shah’s comments suggest the RSP is trying to answer that question by projecting confidence, organization, and policy commitment.

What to watch next

The party’s upcoming internal convention efforts in Chitwan will be an important indicator of how well it can turn grassroots enthusiasm into a more structured political machine. If the RSP can pair that organization with a consistent message on development and manifesto delivery, it may strengthen its case as a serious national contender.

For now, Shah’s Bharatpur appearance offered a simple but pointed pitch: trust the party, and expect results if it gets the chance to lead.