BJP Appoints Amit Shah, JP Nadda as Election Observers for Bengal, Assam

Union Home Minister Amit Shah has been appointed as the BJP's central observer for West Bengal, with Odisha CM Mohan Charan Majhi as co-observer. JP Nadda has been designated as the central observer for Assam, with Haryana CM Nayab Singh Saini as co-observer. The BJP secured 207 seats in West Bengal and 82 seats in Assam, marking historic victories. In other states, Congress-led UDF won in Kerala, while TVK emerged as the single largest party in Tamil Nadu.

Key Points: Amit Shah, JP Nadda Appointed BJP Observers for Bengal, Assam

  • Amit Shah appointed BJP central observer for West Bengal
  • JP Nadda designated observer for Assam legislative party election
  • BJP secures 207 seats in West Bengal, forming first government
  • BJP-led NDA wins hat-trick in Assam with 82 seats
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Amit Shah and JP Nadda appointed as BJP's observers for West Bengal and Assam after election wins

BJP appoints Amit Shah as West Bengal observer and JP Nadda for Assam after historic assembly election wins, with co-observers from Odisha and Haryana.

"BJP created history a day earlier in the assembly polls results, with the party slated to form its first government in West Bengal - News Content"

New Delhi, May 5

Union Home Minister Amit Shah on Tuesday was appointed as the BJP's central observer for West Bengal, with Odisha Chief Minister Mohan Charan Majhi serving as the central co-observer.

Along with this, Union Minister JP Nadda has been designated as the central observer for the election of the leader of the party's legislative party in Assam, with Haryana Chief Minister Nayab Singh Saini as the central co-observer.

BJP created history a day earlier in the assembly polls results, with the party slated to form its first government in West Bengal and the party-led NDA scoring a hat-trick of victories in Assam.

As per the latest data released by the Election Commission of India (ECI), the BJP has secured 207 seats out of 294 seats in West Bengal, and the TMC won 80 seats.

In Assam, BJP secured 82 seats, surpassing the majority mark of 64 by 18 seats, with its regional allies, Asom Gana Parishad (AGP) and Bodoland People's Front (BPF), each winning 10 seats. While the Congress, despite its alliance with five other parties, could only manage 19 seats.

Congress-led United Democratic Front (UDF) scored a massive victory in Keralam and the NR Congress (AINRC)-led alliance comfortably retained Puducherry.

In Kerala, Congress won 63 seats on its own in the 140-member assembly. The CPI-M won 26 seats and CPI eight.

In Tamil Nadu, where Vijay-led Tamilaga Vettri Kazhagam (TVK) emerged as the single largest party, winning 107 seats in the 234-member Assembly, just 11 short of the majority mark. The DMK secured 59 seats, marking a significant setback for the ruling party.

Earlier in the day, Tamil Nadu Governor Rajendra Arlekar accepted the resignation of the outgoing Chief Minister MK Stalin and his Council of Ministers after the assembly election result in which Tamilaga Vettri Kazhagam (TVK) emerged as the single largest party winning 108 seats.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
I'm genuinely surprised by Bengal result. Did not expect such a landslide for BJP. But honestly, I hope they focus on real issues like unemployment and farmers' distress rather than just political consolidation. JP Nadda in Assam is interesting, that state has always been stable under BJP rule.
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Rohit P
Gujarat model coming to Bengal! After years of didi's rule, people have finally chosen change. But I'm worried about the violence-prone areas - hope Amit Shah ensures law and order first. Assam hat-trick shows Modi wave is still strong in Northeast. #ElectionResults2025
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James A
Quite a dramatic shift in Bengal politics. 207 seats for BJP is a massive mandate. As an outsider looking in, it seems the TMC's anti-incumbency caught up with them. But I hope the new government focuses on infrastructure and education equally. Kerala result shows Congress still has strong southern base.
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Michael C
Looking at the bigger picture - BJP is now truly pan-India. From Assam to Bengal to Odisha, they're expanding. But they need to be careful not to over-centralize. JP Nadda is a good choice for Assam as he's known for organizational skills. Kerala still remains a challenge though. Interesting times ahead!
K
Kavya N
As a Bengali, I'm cautiously optimistic. Yes, we needed change from TMC's corruption, but I hope BJP doesn't repeat the mistakes other states made - like neglecting local language and culture. Also, Tamil Nadu result is interesting - Vijay's TVK emerging as single largest party shows regional politics is still alive and kicking. Democracy at work! 🇮🇳

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