Trinamool Ministers Face Massive Defeat in West Bengal Assembly Polls

In a major blow to the Trinamool Congress, 22 of its 35 contesting ministers lost in the 2026 West Bengal assembly elections, including Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee. The defeat reflects deep anti-incumbency, with voters rejecting the core leadership of the party. High-profile ministers such as Sashi Panja, Bratya Basu, and Chandrima Bhattacharya lost their seats to BJP candidates. The BJP secured 207 seats, marking its first government formation in the state.

Key Points: TMC Ministers Lose 22 Seats: Anti-Incumbency Hits Bengal

  • 22 of 35 TMC ministers defeated in West Bengal assembly polls
  • Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee lost in Bhabanipur constituency
  • BJP wins 207 seats, set to form first government in state
  • Key ministers like Sashi Panja, Bratya Basu, and Chandrima Bhattacharya lost
3 min read

Assembly poll results: Massive defeat of Trinamool ministers reflects deep anti-incumbency in West Bengal

22 of 35 Trinamool Congress ministers lost in 2026 West Bengal assembly polls, including CM Mamata Banerjee. BJP wins 207 seats to form first government.

"This is a sweeping, structural rejection of TMC's governance model by the people of West Bengal. - News Report"

Kolkata, May 5

In a significant blow to the Trinamool Congress, 22 out of the 35 ministers from the ruling party who contested the 2026 West Bengal assembly elections have been defeated, including Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee in her own constituency.

A staggering 63 per cent of the cabinet members failed to secure their own seats, marking a clear rejection of the leadership that has governed the state. Voters didn't just oppose individual candidates; they rejected the core leadership of the All India Trinamool Congress.

This loss is particularly significant given the high-profile ministers who were defeated, including those overseeing crucial portfolios such as women and child development, industry, housing, power, education, transport, and backward classes.

This is a sweeping, structural rejection of TMC's governance model by the people of West Bengal.

Among the key losses include Mamata Banerjee (Chief Minister) in Bhabanipur, Aroop Biswas (Housing, Power) in Tollygunge, Bratya Basu (Higher Education, School Education) in Dum Dum, Chandrima Bhattacharya (Environment, Finance, Programme Monitoring) in Dum Dum Uttar, and Shashi Panja (Industry, Commerce & Enterprises; Women & Child Development and Social Welfare) in Shyampukur.

Sujit Bose (Fire and Emergency Services) lost in Bidhannagar, Indranil Sen (Technical Education, Training & Skill Development; Tourism) in Chandannagar, Becharam Manna (Agricultural Marketing) in Singur, and Swapan Debnath (Animal Resources Development) in Purbasthali Dakshin.

Other losses include Bulu Chik Baraik (Backwards Classes Welfare, Tribal Development) in Mal, Pradip Kr. Mazumdar (Co-operation, Panchayats & Rural Development) in Durgapur Purba, Birbaha Hansda (Forests, Self Help Group & Self Employment) in Binpur, Manas Ranjan Bhunia (Irrigation & Waterways) in Sabang, Moloy Ghatak (Labour) in Asansol Uttar, and Siddiqullah Choudhury (Mass Education Extension and Library Services) in Monteswar.

Udayan Guha (North Bengal Development) lost in Dinhata, Sandhyarani Tudu (Paschimanchal Unnayan Affairs) in Manbazar, Bankim Chandra Hazra (Sundarban Affairs) in Sagar, Ujjal Biswas (Science & Technology and Bio-Technology) in Krishnanagar Dakshin, Snehasis Chakraborty (Transport) in Jangipara, Srikant Mahato (MoS, Consumer Affairs) in Salboni, and Satyajit Barman (MoS, School Education) in Hemtabad.

TMC's minister for Industry, Commerce and Enterprises, Sashi Panja, lost the Shyampukur constituency to BJP's Purnima Chakraborty by 14,600+ votes.

Former TMC minister Nirmal Majhi lost the Goghat seat to the BJP's Prasanta Digar by a huge 49,500+ votes.

North Bengal Development Minister Udayan Guha from TMC lost the Dinhata seat by 17400+ votes against BJP's Ajay Ray.

TMC Minister, senior leader and state President of Jamiat Ulema-e-Hind Siddiqullah Chowdhury, also a prominent minority face of TMC, lost the Monteswar seat against BJP's Saikat Panja by a huge 14,700+ votes.

West Bengal's Co-operation minister Pradip Majumdar lost the Durgapur Purba seat by a massive 30,900+ votes against the BJP's Chandra Sekhar Banerjee.

Senior TMC leader and Environment minister Chandrima Bhattacharya lost the Dum Dum Uttar seat to BJP's Sourav Sikdar by a margin of 26,400+ votes.

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

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

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
As a Bengali, I'm shocked but not surprised. The anti-incumbency was building for years - unemployment, lack of industry, and that horrific school recruitment scam. But seeing Mamataji herself lose... it's unprecedented. The people have spoken. Hope this brings real development to Bengal. 🙏
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James A
Interesting how even ministers from minority backgrounds like Siddiqullah Choudhury lost. This isn't about identity politics - it's about governance failure. 63% of cabinet ministers losing is a record. Bengal wanted change, and they got it. But I worry about political stability now.
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Rohit P
Massive losses in key portfolios - education, industry, transport, finance. This wasn't just a defeat; it was a rejection of the entire TMC ecosystem. But let's be honest, BJP also has to prove they can govern better. Elections are just the first step. Development should be the priority now.
K
Kavya N
Watching from Delhi, this feels like a watershed moment for Indian politics. A chief minister losing her own seat is rare. The margins are huge too - 49,500 votes in Goghat, 30,900 in Durgapur Purba. Voters didn't just protest; they delivered a decisive verdict. Bengal deserves better.
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Siddharth J
While I respect the democratic outcome, I'm concerned about the polarisation this might bring. TMC may have failed on governance, but they kept communal harmony in Bengal. BJP's win could change that dynamic. Let's hope the new government focuses on development, not division. 🤞

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