What is BJP’s strategy for 2026 in Bengal?
-- The BJP is leveraging the women’s reservation push and delimitation debate to counter TMC’s welfare-based appeal.
How strong is Mamata Banerjee’s position among women?
Very strong — TMC has maintained a double-digit lead among women voters in multiple elections.
Q4. What role does delimitation play in this election?
Delimitation could reshape constituencies and is being positioned alongside women’s reservation as a structural reform with electoral implications.
(by Nirendra Dev)
One State, One Mamata: Can Modi’s Women Quota Crack Bengal?
With women voters at the centre, BJP links reservation and delimitation to take on Mamata Banerjee’s welfare-driven dominance in West Bengal.
The 2026 West Bengal Assembly election is shaping into a sharply defined political duel: one state, one leader — Mamata Banerjee — versus the full electoral machinery of Narendra Modi and Amit Shah.
At the heart of this contest lies a decisive voter bloc: women.
Across India, the BJP-led NDA has successfully consolidated women voters through targeted welfare schemes. In states like Assam, Bihar, Madhya Pradesh, and Maharashtra, programmes such as Orunodoi, Ladli Behna, and Ladki Bahin have delivered electoral dividends.
These schemes worked not just because of design, but because the BJP or its allies were in power — they could deliver cash, not just promises.
West Bengal presents a fundamentally different battlefield. Here, it is Mamata Banerjee’s Trinamool Congress that has mastered the politics of direct benefit transfer through schemes like Lakshmir Bhandar.
The result is a deeply entrenched support base among women voters — one that has repeatedly tilted elections in her favour.
The Numbers That Matter
In the 2021 Assembly elections, the Trinamool Congress won 213 out of 294 seats with a vote share of 48%, while the BJP secured 77 seats with 39%. The 9% vote share gap tells only part of the story.
Among women voters, the gap was far wider.
Surveys indicated that nearly 50% of women voters backed TMC, giving it a 13% advantage over the BJP. This gender gap has been consistent — even in 2016, TMC enjoyed a 12% lead among women over its rivals.
Turnout trends reinforce this advantage. In the 2024 Lok Sabha elections, women voters in West Bengal turned out at an estimated 82%, compared to 78% among men.
TMC went on to win 29 of the state’s 42 parliamentary seats.
Women are not just a voting bloc in Bengal — they are the electoral fulcrum.
Locked out of power in the state, the BJP cannot replicate its welfare model on the ground. Instead, it has attempted a structural intervention: linking women’s political representation to its broader electoral strategy.
The push for 33% reservation for women in Parliament and state assemblies — tied to the contentious delimitation exercise — is not just a governance reform. It is a political signal aimed squarely at Bengal’s women voters. By framing itself as the architect of “Nari Shakti” empowerment at a national level, the BJP hopes to offset TMC’s local welfare advantage.
This is a high-risk move.
The BJP introduced these proposals despite lacking a two-thirds majority in both Houses of Parliament, fully aware that delimitation would trigger resistance — especially in southern states like Tamil Nadu, where fears of seat redistribution remain politically explosive.
Yet, the gamble suggests urgency.
Bengal is not just another state election — it is a prestige battle the BJP cannot afford to lose repeatedly.
Mamata Banerjee is not ceding ground easily.
The Trinamool Congress continues to double down on women’s representation. For the 2026 elections, it has fielded 52 women candidates — around 20% of its total slate — compared to the BJP’s 11%.
In Parliament, TMC already leads among major parties in women’s representation.
Of its 29 Lok Sabha MPs, 11 are women — nearly 38%.
Whether it dents Mamata Banerjee’s fortress — or reinforces it — is something only the ballot will decide.
courtesy - The Raisina Hills
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