Stable leadership helps policies continue, reduces political conflict, and allows real development to happen.
Looking at the current political situation, the Rastriya Swatantra Party seems to be gaining strong support in the proportional system and is also competing strongly in many direct constituencies.
This suggests it could become the largest party. If the leading party is weakened by just a few seats, the country may again face a coalition government with constant bargaining, withdrawal of support, disputes over ministries, and even mid-term government changes. In the end, ordinary citizens suffer the most from such instability.
Right now, the country needs policy continuity, clear responsibility, and a stable environment where a government can work for a full five-year term. This is more likely when the leading party gets a clear majority, so it can implement its plans without constant political pressure. Of course, giving a majority does not mean blind support, if the government performs well, people will support it, and if it performs badly, voters today are aware and will hold it accountable.
So this time, the decision should focus on giving a clear mandate for stability and long-term progress, because even a difference of 10–20 seats today can decide how stable the next five years will be.
