State Elections Begin Across India as BJP Faces Critical Test in Regional Strongholds
Millions of voters across Assam, Kerala, and Puducherry head to the polls in a high-stakes election cycle testing Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s regional expansion and the opposition’s unity. Amid controversies over electoral roll revisions and shifting political dynamics in West Bengal and Tamil Nadu, these results will serve as a definitive gauge of India’s evolving political landscape.
For the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), these contests represent a strategic effort to make inroads into regions where it has historically struggled, while for opposition parties, the polls serve as a vital test of their ability to unite against BJP dominance. Rahul Verma, a political scientist at the Centre for Policy Research, noted that while the BJP seeks to expand in West Bengal and southern states like Kerala and Tamil Nadu, the elections pose an even greater challenge for the Congress party, whose electoral strength has declined recently. The results will determine if Congress can mount a serious challenge in Assam, capitalize on local election gains in Kerala, and manage internal tensions within the broader opposition alliance.
The summer polls, covering 824 assembly seats across the five regions, are unfolding amid a major controversy regarding the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls. While the Election Commission maintains the exercise aims to remove duplicate or outdated entries and add legitimate ones, opposition parties allege the process has been used to delete millions of voters, specifically targeting Muslims to benefit the BJP—a claim both the BJP and the Commission deny. In Assam, where politics is defined by anxieties over migration and identity along the Bangladesh border, Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma has utilized sharp rhetoric regarding demographic change and Bengali-speaking Muslims, while the Congress-led opposition focuses on governance and regional identity.
In Kerala, a top performer in literacy and healthcare, the campaign centers on welfare as the Left alliance seeks to overcome anti-incumbency against the Congress. Meanwhile, West Bengal remains the most populous battleground with over 70 million voters, where Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee of the Trinamool Congress casts the BJP as a cultural outsider. The BJP has rejected this, campaigning on national security and undocumented immigration in a polarized atmosphere further strained by the SIR exercise, which saw nine million voters removed, many from the Muslim-majority district of Murshidabad. In Tamil Nadu, where voting is scheduled for 23 April, the traditional dominance of the DMK and AIADMK is being challenged by a third force led by superstar Vijay. The BJP, struggling for a foothold in a state rooted in social justice and linguistic identity, views even modest gains as a breakthrough. In Puducherry, the BJP-led National Democratic Alliance focuses its campaign on development and federal ties. These elections will ultimately determine the shifting boundaries of political power and the resilience of regional identities against national consolidation.

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