BJP Fires First Shot for 2026 Assembly Elections — 144 Candidates Named for Bengal, 47 for Kerala; Suvendu Set to Challenge Mamata on Two Fronts
Digital Desk
BJP releases its first candidate lists for 2026 Assembly elections — 144 for West Bengal and 47 for Kerala. Suvendu Adhikari to contest Mamata in both Nandigram and Bhabanipur.
The Bharatiya Janata Party released its first candidate lists for the upcoming Assembly elections in West Bengal and Kerala, naming 144 nominees for Bengal and 47 for Kerala. The announcement, made within 24 hours of the Election Commission declaring the poll schedule, signals that the BJP is wasting no time in building momentum for what promises to be one of the most fiercely contested election seasons in recent years.
Suvendu's Bold Double Challenge to Mamata
The biggest headline from the Bengal list is the decision to field Leader of Opposition Suvendu Adhikari from not one but two constituencies — Nandigram and Bhabanipur. Both seats carry deep political significance. Adhikari defeated Mamata Banerjee in Nandigram during the 2021 Assembly elections in one of the most closely watched political battles the state had seen. Banerjee later returned to the Assembly through a by-election from Bhabanipur, a seat she has represented since 2011.
Bhabanipur is considered Banerjee's political stronghold, and Adhikari's candidature from that constituency is widely seen as the party's most high-stakes decision in the first list, underscoring his role as BJP's principal field commander in Bengal. It is an unmistakable message — the BJP intends to take the fight directly to the Chief Minister's doorstep.
A Diverse and Deliberate Bengal List
Beyond Suvendu, the Bengal list is notable for the range of candidates it brings together. Former state BJP president Dilip Ghosh has been fielded from Kharagpur Sadar, former Rajya Sabha MP Swapan Dasgupta from Rashbehari, former India cricketer Ashok Dinda from Moyna, and actor Rudranil Ghosh is also among the nominees.
Of the 144 nominees, 57 come from fields such as teaching, law, medicine, social work and the armed forces. Teachers account for the largest group with 23 candidates, alongside advocates, doctors, retired military personnel, journalists and cultural personalities. The party has also included 41 sitting MLAs and three former legislators, choosing to back its existing political networks rather than attempt a wholesale reshuffle.
Kerala: A State the BJP Wants to Crack
In Kerala, the BJP named state president and former Union minister Rajeev Chandrasekhar as its candidate from Nemom in Thiruvananthapuram district — the only Assembly constituency the BJP has ever won in the state, securing the seat back in 2016.
Other senior leaders fielded include former state chief K Surendran from Manjeshwar, former Union minister V Muraleedharan from Kazhakootam, Union Minister of State George Kurian from Kanjirappally, and senior leader Sobha Surendran from Palakkad. Among women candidates, the party has nominated former DGP R Sreelekha from Vattiyoorkavu, Padmaja Venugopal from Thrissur, and Navya Haridas from Kozhikode North.
Though the BJP is yet to win an Assembly seat in Kerala at scale, recent wins in the Thrissur Lok Sabha constituency and Thiruvananthapuram municipal polls have boosted its confidence heading into 2026.
The Election Schedule
West Bengal will vote in two phases — April 23 and April 29 — with vote counting for all states on May 4. Kerala, along with Assam and Puducherry, goes to the polls in a single phase on April 9. The Election Commission noted that reducing West Bengal to two phases, compared to eight in 2021, was a deliberate decision to make the process more convenient and manageable for all stakeholders.
What It Means
The speed with which the BJP released these lists — before most other parties had even begun internal deliberations — reflects a party that has learned from past election cycles and is determined to control the early narrative. In Bengal, the challenge is to unseat a Chief Minister who has won three consecutive terms and commands a formidable grassroots machinery. In Kerala, the goal is humbler but no less symbolic — to move from fringe player to credible force in a state dominated by the Left and the Congress. Both battles will define the BJP's 2026 story.
