“Three of five polities voted for a change of government — a redrawn electoral map that every national party must now recalculate.” — Election Commission of India, 4 May 2026
Votes were counted on 4 May 2026 across 824 assembly seats in four states — West Bengal, Tamil Nadu, Kerala, and Assam — and the Union Territory of Puducherry, in the biggest electoral exercise since the 2024 Lok Sabha elections. The verdicts delivered historic upsets across the board: three of five polities voted for a change of government, a new party won a state on debut, and a sitting Chief Minister lost her own constituency.
The results will fundamentally reshape national coalition arithmetic ahead of the 2029 Lok Sabha elections. The BJP scored its most consequential territorial gain in years by winning West Bengal, while in Tamil Nadu a debut party shattered six decades of Dravidian dominance. In Kerala, the Congress-led UDF returned after just one term out of power — restoring the state’s famous alternating pattern — and in Assam, the BJP secured a historic third consecutive term.
📊 Assembly Election Results 2026: State-by-State Snapshot
All five polities delivered verdicts on 4 May 2026. The combined voter turnout exceeded 86% on average, with West Bengal recording an extraordinary 92% — one of the highest ever in any Indian state election. Puducherry led at 89.87%, followed by Assam at 85.38%, Tamil Nadu at 84.69%, and Kerala at 79.63%.
| State / UT | Total Seats | Majority Mark | Winner (Seats) | Key Loser | Turnout |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| West Bengal | 294 | 148 | BJP (207) | Mamata Banerjee (Bhabanipur) | 92% |
| Tamil Nadu | 234 | 118 | TVK (108)* | MK Stalin (Kolathur) | 84.69% |
| Kerala | 140 | 71 | UDF (101) | LDF reduced sharply | 79.63% |
| Assam | 126 | 64 | BJP (82) | Congress (19 seats) | 85.38% |
| Puducherry | 30 | 16 | NDA/AINRC (17) | Congress-led bloc | 89.87% |
Think of these five elections as five simultaneous report cards for India’s parties. BJP got an A+ in Bengal and Assam; Congress/INDIA bloc got a C in Kerala (a pass, barely) and an F in Bengal and Tamil Nadu. The biggest surprise was Tamil Nadu, where a brand-new party (TVK) topped the class in its very first exam. *TVK fell 10 seats short of majority but is largest single party.
🌍 West Bengal: BJP Ends 15 Years of TMC Rule
In the most consequential result of 2026, the BJP won approximately 207 seats in the 294-seat West Bengal assembly, ending the Trinamool Congress’s unbroken rule since 2011 — a 15-year reign under Mamata Banerjee. Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee lost her personal stronghold of Bhabanipur to BJP’s Suvendu Adhikari by 15,105 votes — only the second time she has lost a direct election in her career.
The BJP’s previous best in Bengal was 77 seats in 2021; the 2026 tally of 207 represents a near-tripling of that result, taking the party far past the majority mark of 148. Three factors shaped the campaign: the RG Kar Medical College rape and murder case, which fuelled widespread anger against the TMC government; large-scale anti-incumbency after 15 years in power; and the controversial Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls, which excluded over 9 million voters and became a major point of political dispute. With Bengal’s 42 Lok Sabha seats now potentially in play for the BJP, this is the single most impactful result for 2029 national calculations.
Don’t confuse: The SIR (Special Intensive Revision) of electoral rolls is an ECI exercise to update voter lists — it is not a voter ID scheme. In Bengal 2026, SIR excluded 9 million+ voters and became a major controversy. Questions on this may appear asking what SIR stands for or confusing it with the EPIC (Electoral Photo Identity Card) process.
🎬 Tamil Nadu: Actor Vijay’s TVK Wins on Debut, Ends 59-Year Duopoly
Actor-turned-politician C. Joseph Vijay’s Tamilaga Vettri Kazhagam (TVK) won 108 seats in its very first election, falling 10 seats short of an outright majority but emerging as the single largest party in the 234-seat assembly. The DMK–AIADMK duopoly, unbroken since 1967 — 59 years — has been shattered. Sitting Chief Minister MK Stalin lost his own Kolathur constituency to TVK’s VS Babu. Vijay himself won from Tiruchirapalli East by 27,216 votes.
TVK is now in active talks with independents and smaller parties to form the government. Tamil Nadu’s verdict is the most structurally disruptive of 2026 — no debut party had achieved this scale of victory in a large state since the early years of Indian democracy. The DMK’s collapse from 133 seats (2021) to ~59 in a single term represents a loss of 74 seats.
⚖️ Kerala: UDF Ends LDF’s Second Term, Congress Gets a Lifeline
The Congress-led United Democratic Front (UDF) returned to power in Kerala, winning 101 of 140 seats. Congress alone secured 63 seats; IUML (Indian Union Muslim League) added 22. Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan — who had achieved a historic second consecutive term in 2021 — retained his personal seat of Dharmadam (Kannur) by a narrowed margin, but submitted his resignation as Chief Minister as the LDF suffered a decisive defeat across the state.
The result restores Kerala’s famous alternating pattern between LDF and UDF, broken only once (in 2021) in 44 years. For the Congress party nationally, Kerala is a critical oxygen supply — providing the party a Chief Ministership and a governance platform heading into 2029 after losses in Bengal and the absence of power in Tamil Nadu.
Kerala’s Pattern: LDF and UDF have alternated power in Kerala almost without exception since the 1980s — 44 years. Pinarayi Vijayan’s back-to-back wins in 2016 and 2021 were the only break in this pattern. The 2026 UDF win restores the cycle. Exam questions frequently test LDF vs UDF full forms and their leading parties: LDF is led by CPI(M); UDF is led by Congress.
📌 Assam: BJP Wins Historic Third Consecutive Term
The BJP won 82 of 126 seats in Assam, with NDA allies Asom Gana Parishad (AGP) and Bodoland People’s Front (BPF) adding 10 seats each, taking the alliance well past the majority mark of 64. The Congress was reduced to just 19 seats. Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma, the principal architect of BJP’s Northeast dominance, is set for a second consecutive term as CM — and the party’s third consecutive state government overall since 2016.
No party had won three consecutive elections in Assam since the Congress era of the 1970s–80s. The AIUDF (All India United Democratic Front, led by Badruddin Ajmal) won only 2 seats — a near-wipeout that signals the fragmentation of the minority vote bank that had sustained it. Assam’s result cements BJP’s position as the dominant force in Northeast India.
🏛️ Puducherry: NDA Returns, AINRC Leads to Majority
In the Union Territory of Puducherry, the AINRC-led NDA won 17 of 30 seats, improving on its 2021 tally of 16. AINRC won 12 seats; BJP won 4; with AIADMK and Latchiya Jananayaka Katchi winning 1 each. N. Rangaswamy, founder of the All India N.R. Congress (AINRC), is set to return as Chief Minister. Puducherry recorded the highest turnout among the five polities at 89.87%.
The NDA’s retention of Puducherry denies the Congress a southern showcase and signals that the TVK wave in neighbouring Tamil Nadu did not spill across the border — a notable containment for BJP’s southern alliance partners.
Puducherry is a Union Territory with a legislature — making it one of only three UTs with this status (alongside Delhi and Jammu & Kashmir). Does the governance of a UT through an elected legislature — with the LG’s overriding powers — represent a structural tension in Indian federalism? Puducherry governments have regularly clashed with centrally-appointed Lieutenant Governors over this question.
🌍 What These Five Verdicts Mean for 2029
Three simultaneous changes of government — in West Bengal, Tamil Nadu, and Kerala — reflect the overwhelming power of anti-incumbency as the dominant force in Indian state democracy. For the BJP, Bengal is transformative: the party now governs a state with 42 Lok Sabha seats, potentially remaking the 2029 national map. For the Congress, Kerala provides a lifeline — a Chief Ministership and governance platform — but Bengal and Tamil Nadu expose the deep limits of the INDIA bloc’s ground-level effectiveness.
TVK’s rise introduces a powerful new and unaligned player into southern politics. With no declared national alliance, TVK holds extraordinary bargaining power ahead of 2029 seat-sharing negotiations. The DMK’s collapse simultaneously weakens the INDIA bloc’s southern anchor. Meanwhile, BJP’s Assam hat-trick signals that its Northeast consolidation is not a phase but a structural realignment. With the next general election three years away, every national party must recalculate its coalition strategy on an entirely redrawn map.
May 2026 marks the first time in recent memory that three large states simultaneously changed government in a single count day. Does this reflect a structural shift in Indian voter behaviour — shorter incumbency tolerance, hyper-local accountability, and the declining role of national narratives in state elections? Or does it reflect contingent shocks (RG Kar, dynastic politics, TVK’s novelty) unlikely to repeat?
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824 total assembly seats were contested on 4 May 2026 — West Bengal (294) + Tamil Nadu (234) + Kerala (140) + Assam (126) + Puducherry (30) = 824.
Mamata Banerjee lost from Bhabanipur — her personal stronghold — to BJP leader Suvendu Adhikari by 15,105 votes. This is only the second direct election loss in her career.
West Bengal recorded 92% voter turnout — the highest among the five polities and one of the highest ever in any Indian state election. Puducherry was second at 89.87%.
In Kerala, Congress alone won 63 seats; IUML won 22 seats; together the UDF alliance won 101 of 140 seats. Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan retained Dharmadam but resigned as CM.
The BJP won 82 of 126 seats in Assam — its third consecutive win since 2016. AGP and BPF added 10 seats each. No party had won three consecutive elections in Assam since the Congress era of the 1970s–80s.