High-stakes Tamil Nadu, West Bengal election begins in India amid voter roll row

High-stakes Tamil Nadu, West Bengal election begins in India amid voter roll row

April 23, 2026   07:04 am

Voters will cast their ballots on Thursday as high-stakes state elections get under way across India, with key contests in West Bengal and Tamil Nadu.

In West Bengal, where the fiercest contest is unfolding, voting will be held in 152 of 294 seats across 16 districts in the first phase, with 1,478 candidates in the fray.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has mounted an aggressive push to unseat Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee, whose Trinamool Congress is seeking a fourth straight term in a state the BJP has never governed.

A second phase of polling is scheduled for next week.

The election is taking place against a controversy over a sweeping revision of electoral rolls, which has heightened political tensions in West Bengal ahead of voting.

In Tamil Nadu, elections will be held in a single phase across all 234 constituencies, with more than 57 million voters eligible to vote.

Thursday’s votes are part of a wider round of state elections seen as an early gauge of support for Modi’s party, with polling already held this month in the states of Kerala and Assam and the federally-administered territory of Puducherry.

For the BJP, the contests are a test of its ability to expand in regions where it has struggled, while opposition parties are gauging whether they can challenge its dominance.

That contest is most sharply defined in West Bengal, where the poll is unfolding amid controversy over the electoral roll revision.

About nine million voters - roughly 12% of the state’s electorate - have been removed following a Special Intensive Revision exercise, with officials saying millions were classified as absentee or deceased, while the status of another 2.7 million remains under review.

India’s Election Commission (EC) says the exercise aims to clean up rolls, but it has been mired in controversy and legal challenges since it was first carried out in Bihar last year.

Thirteen states and federally-administered territories have undergone the SIR process so far, but West Bengal is the only one where it was followed by an additional layer of special adjudication.

The issue has raised concerns among affected families, some of whom say their names were struck off despite valid documents, leaving their eligibility to be decided by tribunals even as voting proceeds.

Tensions have been fuelled by political remarks, including from Modi, suggesting the voter roll “clean-up” targets so-called “illegal Bangladeshi infiltrators” - a term the Trinamool Congress says is being used to refer to Muslims. However, officials say many Hindu voters have also been excluded from the list.

Security is a key focus, with a record deployment of about 240,000 central forces across West Bengal, supported by bulletproof vehicles patrolling poll-bound districts.

The scale reflects concerns over electoral violence and intimidation in a state with a history of politically charged contests.

Ahead of the first phase of voting, the EC imposed strict curbs to ensure security, including a ban on bike rallies, pillion riding during the day and non-essential two-wheeler movement at night across 152 constituencies.

The restrictions, in force from Tuesday, also include a 96-hour liquor ban - longer than the usual 48 hours.

West Bengal Chief Electoral Officer Manoj Kumar Agarwal clarified that the extended liquor sale restrictions were not ordered by the EC, while noting a sharp “30-240% spike in offtake from 1,200-1,300 liquor shops”.

He said authorities were “looking into where all this liquor went”.

“This liquor cannot be used for inducement [to voters]. If we receive verified information on any government servant being involved in such inducement activities, very strong action will be taken against them,” Agarwal said.

The revision of electoral rolls, large-scale reshuffle of state government officers and heightened security measures have become particularly contentious in a state where the ruling party is locked in a bitter stand-off with the election authorities.

Thursday’s polling will cover seats largely in the farthest reaches of West Bengal - the northern, central and southwestern belts, which are among its less prosperous regions.

These areas also have a higher share of Muslim, tribal and lower-caste Hindu populations. West Bengal is home to India’s second-largest Muslim population, accounting for roughly 14% of the country’s 172 million Muslims, according to the 2011 census.

All three of the state’s Muslim-majority districts - Murshidabad, Uttar Dinajpur and Malda - go to the polls in this phase.

The constituencies also account for a larger share of the 2.7 million voters removed from the rolls over “logical discrepancies” in their records.

The second phase of polling on 29 April covers 142 seats, largely in and around the capital, Kolkata, and the lower Gangetic plains of south Bengal, a region that has remained a stronghold of Banerjee’s TMC over the past three elections.

Beyond West Bengal, attention also turns to Tamil Nadu, where politics has long been dominated by two regional parties - the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK) and the All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (AIADMK) - both rooted in social justice movements.

The state is currently governed by MK Stalin-led DMK, while the AIADMK is contesting in alliance with the BJP.

This year’s contest has drawn added attention with the entry of actor-turned-politician Vijay and his Tamilaga Vettri Kazhagam (TVK), raising the prospect of a three-way race.

The BJP has historically struggled in the state, where politics is shaped by regional identity, linguistic pride and welfare-driven policies.

Analysts say even modest gains here would be significant for the party as it seeks to expand in southern India, while debates over delimitation - the redrawing of constituencies - have added a sharper edge to regional concerns about political representation.

Source: BBC
-- Agencies

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