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April 27, 2026

THE BIG SHOWDOWN

Two opponents, travelling down the same stretch of road, but on somewhat opposite trajectories. That was Mamata Banerjee, leader of the Trinamool Congress (TMC) and incumbent chief minister of West Bengal, and Suvendu Adhikari, her erstwhile protégé and now the face of the BJP in Bengal, on their way to Bhabanipur--Suvendu on April 2 and Mamata six days later. This is the electoral arena where they are set to fight a duel on April 29. The disciple has proved a point before, defeating his mentor on his home turf Nandigram in 2021, and he is determined to reprise the act, this time in Mamata's own backyard. She, in turn, is projecting herself not just as the defender of Bengali identity, but also as a victim and a lone crusader, pitted against the combined institutional might of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and the Union government led by Prime Minister Narendra Modi. "A total of 19 states and the Centre have come together against me…," she asserts in rally after rally. "I will continue my fight for the common people." Suvendu's April 2 procession to Survey Building, the district electoral office where he filed his nomination, only served to prove her point. A travel ling spectacle, it had Union home min ister Amit Shah, Suvendu and Bengal BJP president Samik Bhattacharya cover the 1.7 km stretch on a decorated vehicle, with cultural performances en route. The crowd was not just local; supporters had been mobilised from Purba Medinipur, Howrah and Ghatal. Mamata, by contrast, just stepped out of her residence, located roughly a ki lometre from Survey Building, on April 8, walked the distance, accompanied not by any drama but just a few close aides. Her crowd was smaller, but over whelmingly localMBuilding Brand Mamata amata is presenting this elect ion not just as a bid for power but for political survival against overwhelming odds, an embat tled sovereign defending her realm. She has resisted the BJP's advances in Bengal before, including during the 2021 as sembly polls--when the TMC won 215 out of Bengal's 294 seats--and in the 2024 general election, in which she redu ced the BJP's 2019 tally of 18 to 12 out of 42 seats. An encore this time would make her India's longestserving woman chief minister, surpassing Sheila Dixit; it will also pave the way for her becoming the most powerful Opposition leader ahead of the 2029 general electionBut first she must conquer anti incumbency, resentment over recruit ment scams and concerns over women's safety--especially in the aftermath of the 2024 rape and murder of student doctor `Abhaya' at the R.G. Kar Medi cal College and Hospital--alongside the perennial issues of unemployment, lack of civic amenities and absence of industrial growth. Yet crowds continue to gather in large numbers at her rallies, particularly in rural Bengal, where the mere sight of Mamata's helicopter stirs a frenzy. She remains `Didi' to them, an elder sister who will work for their welfare and fight for their rightsMamata has always framed elector al contests as battles to save the soul of Bengal, and herself as the embodiment of Bengali identity, which, she alleges, the `outsider' BJP is out to reshape. The predominantly North Indian Hindutva party, the TMC asserts, won't spare even the culinary culture of the machhe-bhate Bengali (fish and riceeating Bengali), likely to impose vegetarianism on them if it comes to power. Mamata, by con trast, pitches a more inclusive slogan: "Je lorche sobar daakey, se jetabey Bangla Maa ke." The one who fights for all will ensure the victory of Mother BengalThe TMC leader reinforces her victim narrative with multiple other strands, from the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls, the transfer of top police brass ahead of the election, to the attempt to introduce a delimitation bill amid elections. The last, Mamata alleges, is a conspiracy

THE TRIPOLAR CONTEST

In its essence, the 2026 assembly election in Tamil Nadu is a battle to build legacies. On the one side is the ruling Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK) and its 73-year-old chief minister M.K. Stalin, who is attempting a remarkable feat for his party, a second consecutive term in power. On the other is their traditional rival, the All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (AIADMK) and its general secretary, Edappadi K. Palaniswami (EPS). For EPS, this is not just a battle to establish himself as a leader in his own right; it is also one to resurrect a party that has been braving many a storm since the death of its iconic leader, the late J. Jayalalithaa, in 2016The contest itself is unfolding in a political landscape that is more fragmented and less predictable than at any point in recent years. While it continues to be framed as a familiar battle between the DMK and the AIADMK, shifts beneath the surface point to a more complicated, tripolar contest. The complication comes in the guise of superstar Vijay's Tamilaga Vettri Kazhagam (TVK), which is positioning itself as an independent alternative to the two Dravidian majors. The TVK's presence could disrupt established vote patterns, particularly among disaffected younger sections and urban voters, which, in turn, could rock the calculations of more than a few players on D-day, April 23, when the state goes to vote. History Beckons he ruling DMK is hoping to T break a jinx this election. The party has only once been voted back to power for a consecutive second term, and that was way back in 1971. Even the party patriarch, the late M. Karunanidhi, could not repeat the feat. It's a pattern that his son Stalin, chief minister and DMK president, is determined to break this electionThe party entered the 2026 Tamil Nadu election season with what appears to be a carefully constructed strategy: a broad alliance, early organisational preparation, an attempt to recast itself in a more modern, youthful light, and some concentrated booth-level mobilisation. The DMK started poll preparations well in advance, in early 2025, with Stalin reviewing all the major welfare schemes that come under the party's `Naan Mudhalvan (I am First)' project. As has been the practice of all election-bound governments these past few years, the CM also ensured that all beneficiaries got their dues much before the poll dates were notified. Another small residue of being in power--anti-incumbency--was also addressed: a shake-up of the legislature party was deemed the answer--there are 60 new faces among the 164 candidates it is fieldingThe DMK also sewed up a far-ranging coalition, bringing in new partners while retaining older ones. This had

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