In a dramatic, high-stakes contest that mirrored the political theatre of Nandigram five years ago, BJP’s Suvendu Adhikari on Monday defeated Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee in her home turf Bhabanipur
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KOLKATA — The script that once defined her politics--defiance, comeback, control--has been upended with ruthless symmetry. Mamata Banerjee, the streetfighter who rose from the margins to redraw West Bengal’s political map, has lost not just the state she ruled for 15 years, but also Bhabanipur--her political refuge, her backyard, her last fortress.
For the Trinamool Congress supremo, who fused party, government and narrative into a single axis, the poll verdict is not merely electoral, it is existential.
The BJP has stormed to power with a two-thirds majority, ending the TMC's uninterrupted 15-year rule. But the political punctuation mark lies elsewhere. In Banerjee's home turf Bhabanipur, where Suvendu Adhikari defeated her by over 15,000 votes, replaying the ghost of Nandigram with chilling precision.
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What was once an exception has now become a pattern. In 2021, the 71-year-old leader lost Nandigram but retained Bengal. In 2026, she lost both.
This is not defeat; this is rupture. For over a decade and a half, Banerjee was Bengal’s unchallenged centre of gravity--the leader who dismantled the 34-year Left Front regime in 2011 and replaced it with a political order stamped in her image.
Governance, welfare delivery, candidate selection, campaign messaging--all flowed through a tightly centralised core anchored in her authority.
That architecture has now caved in under the accumulated weight of incumbency.
The signs were visible, but rarely decisive. Recruitment scams, corruption allegations, administrative fatigue, and a sharpening opposition narrative had begun to chip away at the sheen of a government once seen as electorally invincible. Yet, Banerjee had repeatedly turned adversity into advantage—from Singur to Nandigram, from street protests to sweeping mandates.
This time, the burden proved heavier than the instinct.
The Bhabanipur contest itself mirrored that slow unravelling. Banerjee surged ahead by over 17,000 votes in the early rounds. Then came the slide—steady, silent, irreversible. In the final five rounds, Adhikari surged past her, sealing a victory that was as symbolic as it was strategic.
The fortress did not fall in one blow. It eroded, then collapsed.
Few leaders in contemporary Indian politics have embodied their party as completely as Banerjee. Over time, the distinction between leader and organisation dissolved into near-total overlap. That model—once her greatest strength—now stands exposed in defeat.
A party held together by proximity to power must now confront life without it. Inside the TMC, the implications are immediate and potentially destabilising.
A formation whose cohesion has long been tied to administrative control, patronage networks and electoral dominance now faces the harder task of holding together without those levers. In the absence of a strong ideological adhesive, sections of its leadership -- many aligned through access to power -- could turn fluid, raising the prospect of defections, including towards the BJP.
The challenge is no longer just electoral recovery, but organisational survival. For Banerjee, the terrain shifts sharply.
At 71, after three terms in office, the road to a comeback appears steeper than at any previous point in her career. She has rebounded before—from Singur to Nandigram—turning setbacks into springboards. But this moment presents a different scale of challenge, where time, organisational fatigue and a resurgent opponent converge.
Yet, her politics has historically thrived in resistance.
Stripped of power, Banerjee could seek to return to that idiom—recalibrating the TMC from a governance machine into an opposition force, rebuilding its political muscle outside the structures of the state. Whether that pivot comes swiftly enough to arrest internal drift remains the central question.
Nationally, the blow is immediate but not terminal. Losing Bengal weakens her leverage within the opposition ecosystem, where she had positioned herself as a key regional pole against the BJP. Yet, it also frees her from the constraints of governance—a space where Banerjee has often been at her most combative.
For the BJP, the victory marks a long-sought breakthrough. But even in triumph, it inherits a familiar adversary--one who has historically proved more formidable outside power than within it.
The symbolism of the verdict is stark. A leader once seen as inseparable from the state has been separated from both--decisively, publicly and personally. The aura of inevitability has been punctured.
Yet, writing her political obituary would be premature.
Banerjee’s career has never followed a linear arc. Each setback has been a prelude to reinvention. This, however, is her most severe test--one that challenges not just her instinct to fight, but her capacity to rebuild.
For Mamata Banerjee --“Didi” to millions-- the message from Bengal is unambiguous: power has slipped, authority has fractured, and the system she built has begun to loosen from within.
What follows will not be a return to the familiar. It will be a test of whether she can once again turn survival into resurgence.