Mamata's Big Gamble: 74 MLAs Out, Bhawanipur Showdown On, Bengal Battle Begins
Digital Desk
TMC releases 291-seat candidate list for Bengal 2026. 74 sitting MLAs dropped, Mamata vs Suvendu in Bhawanipur, Nandigram twist & Darjeeling alliance explained.
Bengal's Real Election Just Started — And Mamata Came Out Swinging
For weeks, West Bengal's political temperature had been building. On Tuesday, March 17, it exploded. Trinamool Congress chief and Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee walked into a press conference in Kolkata and did something her critics said she would never do before an election: she dropped 74 of her own sitting MLAs — roughly one in every three incumbents — and dared the entire political landscape of Bengal to respond.
The TMC has released its candidate list for 291 of West Bengal's 294 assembly seats, setting up a fiercely contested two-phase election on April 23 and April 29, with results declared on May 4. The three seats left out are the Darjeeling hill constituencies, allocated to ally Bharatiya Gorkha Prajatantrik Morcha led by Anit Thapa — a hill alliance arrangement that has been in place since 2021 and continues under the same understanding.
What makes this list historically significant is not the 291 candidates. It is the 74 who did not make it.
The Mass Dropping: Bold Reform or Necessary Surgery?
In Indian electoral politics, a ruling party dropping one-third of its sitting legislators before a state election is not routine. It is either a sign of supreme confidence — the belief that the party's brand is strong enough to absorb any local disruption caused by dropping popular incumbents — or a sign of genuine alarm about anti-incumbency levels so high that carrying those legislators would cost more seats than replacing them.
In TMC's case, party insiders suggest it is both.
The Trinamool has now been in power in West Bengal for fifteen consecutive years. That is a long time for any government anywhere. Local-level dissatisfaction — with individual MLAs, with land disputes, with the cut money culture that has dogged TMC's grassroots workers, with public service delivery in many areas — had been building in a way that the I-PAC data analytics team, which has been embedded in TMC's campaign planning for months, could not overlook.
The response was surgical: of the 224 sitting TMC MLAs, 135 — approximately 60 percent — were retained. Fifteen were shifted to different constituencies, giving them a fresh battlefield without entirely discarding their experience. And 74 were dropped entirely — including some who held ministerial positions and had been TMC faces for a decade or more.
Former Education Minister Partha Chatterjee, who had been at the centre of the school jobs scam that generated enormous political damage for TMC, has not been renominated from Behala Paschim. In his place, Ratna Chatterjee will contest. Former cricketer and state Sports Minister Manoj Tiwary — once a popular face for the party — has also not been renominated, a decision that reflects honest internal assessment over loyalty politics.
The message Mamata is sending to voters, party workers, and opposition alike is: we heard the complaints, we acted on them, and we are not afraid to change.
Bhawanipur: The Rematch That Bengal Cannot Stop Talking About
In 2021, Suvendu Adhikari defeated Mamata Banerjee in Nandigram by a whisker — a result so close it went to court and became the defining emotional moment of an entire state election. Mamata, despite that personal loss, retained power with a massive majority and was re-elected to the assembly from the Bhawanipur by-election shortly after.
In 2026, the BJP has sent Adhikari directly to Bhawanipur — Mamata's own home turf — setting up the most anticipated individual contest of the entire election. Mamata has confirmed she will contest from Bhawanipur, and has shown no inclination to avoid the fight.
Adhikari is simultaneously contesting from both Bhawanipur and Nandigram — a dual candidacy strategy that BJP is using to maximise its most recognisable Bengal face. In Nandigram, TMC has a surprise in store: Pabitra Kar, a former close aide of Adhikari himself, has been fielded as the TMC candidate — a move designed to neutralise the Adhikari mystique in his own stronghold by using someone who knows him from the inside.
Whether this works will be one of the most closely watched individual results on May 4.
Who Got In: New Faces, Surprising Choices, Clear Signals
The inclusion list tells as much of a story as the exclusion list. Olympian and Asian Games gold medallist Swapna Barman has been fielded from Rajganj — a high-visibility choice that projects TMC's aspiration to represent achievement alongside politics. Former journalist Devadeep Purohit has been nominated from Khardah. Abhishek Banerjee, the TMC General Secretary and nephew of Mamata, confirmed that of the 291 candidates, 239 are men and 52 are women, with the social coalition breakdown as follows: 149 from General and OBC categories, 78 Scheduled Castes, 17 Scheduled Tribes, and 47 minorities.
The minority figure — 47 candidates, approximately 16 percent of the total list — is a deliberate and precisely calibrated political statement. West Bengal has a Muslim population of approximately 27 percent, concentrated in specific districts. TMC's minority vote bank has been its most dependable electoral foundation since 2011. The 47 minority candidates represent consolidation of that base while maintaining enough diversity in the list to avoid the communal framing that BJP has been trying to push through its campaign messaging.
Kunal Ghosh, the TMC spokesperson, makes his assembly electoral debut from Beleghata. Sirsan Banerjee, son of Lok Sabha MP Kalyan Banerjee, has been fielded from Uttarpara. Senior minister Firhad Hakim retains his Kolkata Port seat. Madan Mitra returns from Kamarhati. These familiar faces anchor the list with proven vote-getters while the new names carry the energy of freshness.
What the BJP Must Answer
The BJP released its first list of 144 candidates on March 16 — and has yet to announce the remaining 150. TMC's comprehensive list, released in one clean sweep before BJP has even completed its candidate selection, is a tactical advantage that signals organisation, confidence, and decisiveness.
Mamata, never one to miss a political attack when the opportunity exists, also used the candidate list press conference to take a swipe at the BJP over the LPG crisis — alleging that the gas shortage affecting millions of Bengali households was a BJP-created problem. Whether that charge sticks will depend largely on how the LPG supply situation looks in Bengal by late April when voting happens. If cylinders remain scarce on election day, it will be the BJP's heaviest burden going into the booth.
The two-phase polling — April 23 for one set of constituencies, April 29 for the rest — compresses the campaign into roughly five weeks from today. With the full TMC list out, the BJP list partially out, and the Election Commission having already transferred senior police officials over TMC objections, the battle for Bengal is no longer coming. It is here.
Opinion: Dropping 74 Is Easy. Winning 226 Is the Real Test.
Mamata Banerjee has set herself a public target: more than 226 seats — the two-thirds majority that would give TMC a mandate more emphatic than 2021. That is an ambitious number for a party entering its sixteenth year in power in a state where anti-incumbency, economic frustration, and a better-organised BJP opposition all present real challenges.
The dropping of 74 MLAs is the right move. The Bhawanipur choice is confident. The I-PAC driven seat-by-seat analysis that shaped this list is exactly the kind of data-driven discipline that Indian state elections increasingly require. But a candidate list, however well constructed, is not a mandate. It is an application.
Bengal's voters will deliver their answer on April 23 and 29. And whatever that answer is, it will say something important — not just about one state's politics, but about whether voters in India's most politically intense state believe that fifteen years of the same government deserves a sixteenth.
Mamata believes they do. The BJP believes they do not. In six weeks, we will know who was right.
