Assam Election 2026 Signals Deep Political Polarisation as Congress Retains Minority Belt and BJP Dominates Majority Regions
The 2026 Assam Assembly elections revealed a sharp political divide as Congress consolidated Muslim-majority constituencies following the decline of AIUDF, while the BJP-led alliance dominated majority-centric regions through consolidated Hindu, tribal and tea-garden worker support amid demographic shifts caused by delimitation and eviction drives.
Political observers believe the most significant factor behind this electoral shift was the collapse of the All India United Democratic Front (AIUDF), the party that had long represented Bengali-speaking Muslims in Assam, a community that constitutes nearly 35 percent of the state’s population.
For several election cycles, minority votes in Lower Assam and the Barak Valley remained divided between the Congress and the AIUDF. This division frequently benefited the BJP and its ally Asom Gana Parishad in multiple constituencies. However, in the 2026 elections, the weakening organisational structure of the AIUDF and declining public confidence in the party resulted in a large-scale transfer of Muslim votes to the Congress.
The election also witnessed strong strategic voting among Muslim communities. A significant section of voters appeared convinced that the Congress was the only party capable of mounting a serious challenge against the BJP. This perception led to heavy consolidation of minority votes behind Congress candidates, including in constituencies where the party was not initially considered electorally strong.
Simultaneously, the BJP under Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma successfully consolidated Hindu votes cutting across caste, ethnic and regional divisions. In Upper Assam, the North Bank and several parts of central Assam, the BJP effectively transformed the election into a direct ideological contest, leaving little political space for the Congress outside the Bengali-speaking Muslim-dominated constituencies.
Another major electoral factor was the impact of eviction drives conducted in districts such as Darrang and Nagaon. While many Muslim voters viewed these operations with fear and insecurity, a large section of indigenous Assamese voters perceived them as decisive administrative action aimed at protecting land rights and regional interests.
This development triggered parallel political consolidation. Bengali-speaking Muslims in Lower Assam increasingly rallied behind the Congress, while indigenous and majority community voters strongly aligned with the BJP.
The perception surrounding the AIUDF also played a decisive role in reshaping voter behaviour. Many minority voters increasingly viewed the party as indirectly benefiting the BJP by dividing anti-BJP votes. The AIUDF’s earlier support to the BJP during Rajya Sabha voting further strengthened this perception. As a result, several Muslim voters abandoned the AIUDF and shifted towards the Congress.
The 2023 delimitation exercise also significantly altered Assam’s political landscape. Constituency boundaries were redrawn in a manner that reduced mixed-population swing constituencies and created more demographically polarised electoral segments.
Earlier, the Congress had managed to win several constituencies by combining minority support with sections of Hindu voters. However, following delimitation, many constituencies became either clearly majority-dominated or Muslim-dominated, sharply reducing the scope for coalition-based electoral strategies.
Before delimitation, Muslim voters were considered decisive in nearly 35 Assembly seats. After the restructuring of constituencies, Muslim influence became concentrated in approximately 22 seats. The final election outcome reflected this altered demographic and political reality.
The 2026 Assam Assembly verdict has therefore underlined a deeper structural transformation in the state’s politics, where broad-based coalition building is gradually being replaced by sharper community-based electoral consolidation, fundamentally redefining Assam’s political future.

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