The Bharatiya Janata Party won 206 seats [1] in the West Bengal assembly elections, ending the 15-year rule of the Trinamool Congress.
This shift represents a fundamental change in the political landscape of West Bengal, marking the first time the BJP will appoint a chief minister in the state. The result follows a high-stakes battle for the 294-seat legislature [3].
While the BJP has secured a two-thirds majority, the party has not officially announced who will serve as the next chief minister. Speculation has centered on BJP leaders, including Suvendu Adhikari [1]. Adhikari won the Bhabanipur seat by a margin of over 15,000 votes [2].
Other political figures have also emerged in the broader regional context. TVK Vijay, who scored significant wins in other areas, said his party will prove its majority in two weeks [1]. This suggests that while the BJP has the numbers in Bengal, the overall regional political alignment is still settling.
The Election Commission of India has not yet finalized all results. Repolling is scheduled for the Falta constituency on May 21, 2026 [4].
The defeat marks a significant turning point for Mamata Banerjee and the Trinamool Congress, which had maintained a grip on the state government for over a decade. The BJP victory was decisive across the 294-seat assembly [3], signaling a strong mandate for the party's platform in the region.
“The Bharatiya Janata Party won 206 seats in the West Bengal assembly elections.”
The transition of power in West Bengal ends a long era of Trinamool Congress dominance and establishes the BJP as the primary governing force in the state. The scale of the victory provides the new administration with a substantial legislative majority, though the delay in naming a chief minister indicates internal deliberations over leadership. The upcoming repoll in Falta is unlikely to alter the overall outcome but remains a necessary legal step for the Election Commission to certify the full assembly.



