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Updated May 29, 2026 · 12:15
Punjab News Updated May 29, 2026

AAP Dominates Punjab Civic Polls as Early Trends Show Major Lead

The AAP has taken a substantial lead in Punjab's Urban Local Body elections, winning 178 wards as per early trends. The Congress and Shiromani Akali Dal are closely contested with 58 and 53 wards respectively. The elections, held across 102 civic bodies, saw a voter turnout of 63.94% amid reports of clashes and allegations of booth capturing. The results are seen as a key indicator ahead of the state assembly elections in early 2027.

AAP making substantial lead in Punjab civic polls as per early vote count trends

Chandigarh, May 29

The ruling AAP in Punjab has been making substantial leads as per early vote count trends on Friday for the election to Urban Local Bodies. The main Opposition Congress and the regional outfit Shiromani Akali Dal are neck-to-neck.

The AAP won 178 wards, while the Congress and SAD tally stood at 58 and 53 wards, respectively, till 11 A.M.

The elections are seen as a litmus test for the AAP just ahead of the Assembly elections in the state, slated in early 2027.

The state on May 26 went to the polls to elect representatives in 102 civic bodies, comprising eight municipal corporations, 75 municipal councils and 19 nagar panchayats.

The elections covered 1,897 wards that saw a voter turnout of 63.94 per cent. A total of 7,554 candidates are in the fray across all Urban Local Bodies.

The eight municipal corporations are in Abohar, Mohali, Moga, Bathinda, Barnala, Batala, Kapurthala and Pathankot.

Of the total candidates in the fray, 1,801 belong to the AAP, 1,550 to the Congress, 1,316 to the BJP, 1,251 to the SAD, and 96 to the BSP, while 1,528 are Independent and 13 other candidates.

Nagar panchayats recorded the highest voter turnout at 76.18 per cent, followed by Municipal Councils with 65.06 per cent and Municipal Corporations 59.91 per cent.

According to the state Election Commission, Municipal Corporations accounted for 10.71 lakh electors, of whom 6.41 lakh cast their votes. Municipal Councils had the largest electorate, with over 22.87 lakh voters, and nearly 14.88 lakh votes were cast. In Nagar Panchayats, over 1.07 lakh votes were recorded out of 1.41 lakh electors.

Polling day saw clashes involving supporters of the BJP, Congress, AAP, and the Akali Dal and allegations of booth capturing were reported at several places.

In Raikot, Congress candidate from Ward 4, Jagdev Singh Jagga, was allegedly attacked with sharp-edged weapons by a group of men, while in Barnala the husband of BJP candidate Deepinder Kaur from Ward 15 was allegedly assaulted after objecting to suspected bogus voting.

Clashes were also reported in Gidderbaha in Muktsar district, where supporters of AAP and the Akali Dal confronted each other during polling in Wards 18 and 19.

State Congress chief Amrinder Singh Raja Warring and Congress legislator Partap Singh Bajwa condemned the incident and slammed the AAP government over the law and order situation in the state.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Priya S

Finally, some good news for Punjab! The AAP has been doing good work on education and health in the state. This early lead shows that people are happy with Kejriwal's governance model. But these clashes during polling are a blot—Congress and Akalis need to accept their loss gracefully rather than creating ruckus.

James A

Impressive numbers for AAP so far—178 wards vs Congress's 58. That's a huge margin. The turnout in nagar panchayats (76%) is particularly striking—rural-urban Punjabis are voting with enthusiasm. Hope the violence in Raikot and Barnala doesn't escalate further.

Vikram M

While I'm happy about AAP's performance, I'm disappointed by the violence. The attack on the Congress candidate in Raikot is unacceptable—no party should tolerate such thuggery. Also interesting that BJP fielded 1,316 candidates but seems to be trailing badly. Where's their much-talked-about Punjab resurgence?

Sarah B

The voter turnout stats are telling—59.91% in corporations vs 76.18% in nagar panchayats. Smaller municipalities are clearly more engaged. AAP's lead seems strong but remember, these are civic polls—local issues matter more than national politics here. Let's see if they can maintain this in the big one in 2027.

Rohit P

AAP doing well but the opposition needs to introspect. Congress with 1,550 candidates only got 58 wards—that's a massive rejection. SAD with 1,251 candidates got 53—also disappointing. The BJP with 1,316 candidates seems to be nowhere. 1

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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