>"None [of the 'wins for the B.J.P. from Haryana
<https://www.nytimes.com/2024/10/08/world/asia/india-elections-haryana-jammu-kashmir.html>
 to Maharashtra
<https://www.nytimes.com/2024/11/23/world/asia/india-resort-politics-maharashtra-election.html>
 to Bihar
<https://www.nytimes.com/2025/11/14/world/asia/india-bihar-election-modi.html>
'] shook the earth the way that victory in West Bengal
<https://www.nytimes.com/2026/04/24/world/asia/india-elections-modi-bengal.html>
 did Monday."

>“'We have created a new history today,' Mr. Modi said in a celebratory
speech to party workers in New Delhi. 'Our constitutional institutions have
won, our democratic processes have won.'

The election was not without controversy, in particular around those same
constitutional institutions."

>"Nine million names, many of them Muslim, were struck from the voter rolls
<https://www.nytimes.com/2025/09/13/world/asia/india-voters-bihar.html> in
an audit by the Election Commission ahead of the election."

>"The Election Commission had rejected earlier versions of similar
complaints [referring to Ms. Banerjee's'] claim that Mr. Modi’s win was
fraudulent, telling the Press Trust of India, a nonprofit news agency, that
he manipulated the commission and 'looted votes in more than 100 seats.'

 The commission, a formally independent body, is currently led by an
official with close ties to Mr. Modi."

>"One of the biggest surprises of the day was in Tamil Nadu, where the
party of a political novice, the actor Joseph
<https://www.nytimes.com/2025/09/27/world/asia/stampede-vijay-rally-india.html>Vijay
Chandrasekhar
<https://www.nytimes.com/2025/09/27/world/asia/stampede-vijay-rally-india.html>
, did better than either of the established parties in the state."

>Ms. Banerjee ran her state in many ways like the Communists before her,
swinging against corporate interests while heralding welfare schemes and
playing up her credentials as a secularist, which made her especially
popular among Muslims and liberals. And, like the Communists’, her
government developed a reputation for corruption and even brutality."
-----------------------
By: Alex Travelli, Hari Kumar and Pragati K.B.
Hari Kumar reported from Kolkata, the capital of West Bengal. Alex Travelli
and Pragati K.B. reported from New Delhi.
Published in: *The New York Times*
Date: May 4, 2026
The party of Prime Minister Narendra Modi took control of West Bengal for
the first time and made gains around the country. Its defeated opponents
accused it of cheating.

The Hindu nationalist party of Prime Minister Narendra Modi of India broke
new ground Monday in its decades-long campaign to remake the world’s
largest democracy, winning legislative elections in one of the country’s
most populous states, where it has never before come close to ruling.

The Bharatiya Janata Party’s landmark achievement in West Bengal, home to
more than 100 million people, brings to an end 15 years of rule by Mamata
Banerjee, one of Mr. Modi’s most outspoken critics. The B.J.P. looked set
to win 208 seats out of 294, compared to just three seats a decade ago — a
stunning change in fortunes as support for Ms. Banerjee’s party, the
Trinamool Congress, collapsed.

The win is a boost for the expansionist Hindu-first
<https://www.nytimes.com/2025/12/26/world/asia/india-hindu-right-rss-modi.html>
 politics of Mr. Modi’s party, which has held the reins of national
government in New Delhi since 2014. It added to the B.J.P.’s winning streak
in state elections, after Mr. Modi’s serious setback in 2024, the last time
India voted as a whole, when the B.J.P. lost its majority in Parliament.

Since then, the B.J.P. has won in every state election where it devoted
significant resources, securing control of the powerful regional
parliaments that are in charge of social programs and law enforcement
within their borders. The streak has included wins for the B.J.P. from
Haryana
<https://www.nytimes.com/2024/10/08/world/asia/india-elections-haryana-jammu-kashmir.html>
 to Maharashtra
<https://www.nytimes.com/2024/11/23/world/asia/india-resort-politics-maharashtra-election.html>
 to Bihar
<https://www.nytimes.com/2025/11/14/world/asia/india-bihar-election-modi.html>
.

But none shook the earth the way that victory in West Bengal
<https://www.nytimes.com/2026/04/24/world/asia/india-elections-modi-bengal.html>
 did Monday.

“We have created a new history today,” Mr. Modi said in a celebratory
speech to party workers in New Delhi. “Our constitutional institutions have
won, our democratic processes have won.”

The election was not without controversy, in particular around those same
constitutional institutions.

Nine million names, many of them Muslim, were struck from the voter rolls
<https://www.nytimes.com/2025/09/13/world/asia/india-voters-bihar.html> in
an audit by the Election Commission ahead of the election. Ms. Banerjee,
who will be replaced by a chief minister of Mr. Modi’s choosing, took to
social media to claim that Mr. Modi’s win was fraudulent, telling the Press
Trust of India, a nonprofit news agency, that he manipulated the commission
and “looted votes in more than 100 seats.”

The Election Commission had rejected earlier versions of similar
complaints. The commission, a formally independent body, is currently led
by an official with close ties to Mr. Modi.

Ms. Banerjee had been “one of the pillars of opposition politics with her
stress on federalism, and strident anti-B.J.P. politics,” said Arati
Radhika Jerath, a political analyst in New Delhi. Her defeat, said Ms.
Jerath, “marks the beginning of the end for regional politics and regional
political parties.”

Ms. Banerjee even lost her own seat, in the Bhabanipur neighborhood of
Kolkata, to Suvendu Adhikari, a former ally who joined the B.J.P. in 2020.
Mr. Adhikari is expected to be Mr. Modi’s first choice to lead the state’s
new government.

Across India, more than 154 million Indians voted in elections over the
past month in four states and one territory. The other states that voted
offered up other successes for Mr. Modi’s B.J.P. Already strong in Assam,
they gained seats there, and they won a few even in Kerala and Tamil Nadu,
where the B.J.P. has made few inroads. Opposition groups now hold power in
just seven of India’s 28 states.

One of the biggest surprises of the day was in Tamil Nadu, where the party
of a political novice, the actor Joseph Vijay Chandrasekhar
<https://www.nytimes.com/2025/09/27/world/asia/stampede-vijay-rally-india.html>,
did better than either of the established parties in the state.

West Bengal was seen as a litmus test of how far the Hindu right can reach.
Turnout was record-breaking for the state, with more than 92 percent of
eligible voters participating, after the audit removed the nine million
names from the list.

As results trickled in, young men on motorbikes painted their faces in the
B.J.P.’s colors and shouted a Hindu nationalist slogan for victory. “People
wanted change in Bengal,” said Pradeep Mandal, a 25-year-old driver. “This
is a vote for change, from people facing corruption.”

Anil Sikdar, a loader at the Kolkata airport, was jubilant about the
outcome. “Didi,” he said, using Ms. Banerjee’s nickname, which means elder
sister, “is not bad, but her party is corrupt. They have driven industry
out of Bengal.”

Just two years ago, such a win seemed fanciful. The electorate seemed to be
tiring
<https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2024/06/07/world/asia/india-election-map.html>
 of Mr. Modi, after a decade that included the catastrophe of Covid-19 and
the gradual disappointment of an economy that delivered too few jobs for
too many ambitious young Indians.

The B.J.P. held onto power by corralling a couple of regional rivals into a
coalition, but the shock was profound. Since the 2024 parliamentary
election, it has been laser-focused on winning state elections across the
country.

For most of its existence, Kolkata, the capital of West Bengal state,
served as the capital of colonial India, when it was known as Calcutta. Its
16 million residents see themselves as inheritors of the entire country’s
great traditions.

One of those is what Indians call secularism: the 19th-century principle
that the state should not favor any religion. Bengalis also distinguished
themselves as leaders of India’s struggle for independence from colonial
rule, of literary and artistic pursuit, and of labor activism. Communist
parties ruled West Bengal for 34 years, until Ms. Banerjee displaced them
in 2011.

Mr. Modi’s B.J.P., by contrast, descends from a school of thinking that
defines India as a Hindu nation and abhors the thousand-year presence of
Islam. Some of the party’s early leaders were Bengali, but by the time it
emerged as a modern political force it was only strong in Mr. Modi’s home
state of Gujarat and the Hindi-speaking north; West Bengal stayed aloof.

Ms. Banerjee ran her state in many ways like the Communists before her,
swinging against corporate interests while heralding welfare schemes and
playing up her credentials as a secularist, which made her especially
popular among Muslims and liberals. And, like the Communists’, her
government developed a reputation for corruption and even brutality.

Jawhar Sircar, a decorated former official, represented Ms. Banerjee’s
party in Parliament’s upper house from 2021 to 2024. Watching the Trinamool
Congress lose on Monday, he offered a bitter farewell. “You guys are
secular, and God bless you for that. But you also became corrupt,” he said.

There were many accusations of corruption against Ms. Banerjee’s partners
in government over the years. Perhaps the most damaging was when her
education minister was arrested in 2022 on charges of helping to sell
thousands of government teaching jobs for thousands of dollars each. He has
denied the charges.

There was also national outrage after the rape and murder of a doctor at a
Kolkata hospital
<https://www.nytimes.com/2026/04/30/world/asia/india-elections-bjp-ratna-debnath.html>
 last year, and the B.J.P. campaigned to women voters by promising better
safety and bigger cash handouts. The party fielded the mother
<https://www.nytimes.com/2026/04/30/world/asia/india-elections-bjp-ratna-debnath.html>
 of the victim as a candidate, and she won.

In her campaigns, Ms. Banerjee positioned herself as defending the Bengali
culture of West Bengal against the encroachment of a Hindu-first,
Hindi-first government. But standing up for one Indian state against the
national government is no longer a winning ticket, said Ms. Jerath, the
analyst. “Cultural identity and politics around it is just not enough.
People want jobs, they are aspirational, they want to get ahead.”
Alex Travelli is a correspondent based in New Delhi, writing about business
and economic developments in India and the rest of South Asia.
Hari Kumar covers India, based out of New Delhi. He has been a journalist
for more than two decades.
Pragati K.B. is a reporter for The Times based in New Delhi, covering news
from across India.

Reply via email to