Over 2,000 Candidates Cleared for Key State Assembly Polls After Scrutiny

The Election Commission of India has completed the scrutiny of nomination papers for upcoming Assembly elections and by-elections. Over 2,140 candidates are now confirmed to be contesting across Assam, Kerala, and Puducherry, with Kerala fielding the highest number. The final candidate list will be set after the withdrawal deadline on March 26. All procedures were videographed and conducted transparently in the presence of candidates.

Key Points: 2,000+ Candidates in Fray for 2026 Assembly Elections

  • Scrutiny completed for 2026 Assembly polls
  • Over 2,140 candidates in fray
  • Kerala has highest 985 candidates
  • Withdrawal deadline March 26
  • Process videographed for transparency
2 min read

Assembly polls: Scrutiny over, more than 2,000 candidates in fray across key states

Election Commission completes nomination scrutiny for Assam, Kerala, Puducherry, Tamil Nadu, West Bengal polls and by-elections. Over 2,100 candidates remain.

"The final picture of the contest... will emerge after the deadline for withdrawal of nominations - Election Commission"

New Delhi, March 25

The Election Commission of India on Wednesday said the scrutiny of nomination papers for the 2026 Assembly elections and by-elections has been completed, firming up the field of candidates across several key states going to the polls next month.

The elections are scheduled for Assam, Kerala, Puducherry, Tamil Nadu and West Bengal, along with by-elections in six states.

The last date for filing nominations for Assam, Kerala and Puducherry -- which vote on April 9 -- was March 23. Post-scrutiny, a total of 2,140 candidates remain in the fray for the Assembly elections across the three states and one Union Territory.

According to an official press note issued by the Commission, the scrutiny process was carried out by Returning Officers on March 24 and concluded for all poll-bound states and the Union Territory, as well as for the by-elections.

The exercise was conducted in the presence of candidates and their authorised representatives, with full videography to ensure transparency.

Kerala accounts for the highest number with 985 candidates contesting 140 seats, followed by Assam with 789 candidates for 126 seats. Puducherry has 366 candidates for its 30-member Assembly.

In the by-elections, a total of 66 candidates are contesting across five Assembly constituencies. Karnataka accounts for the highest number with 50 candidates across two seats, while Goa has three candidates, Nagaland has seven, and Tripura has six.

The Election Commission said that, as per established procedure, the list of validly nominated candidates has been prepared and displayed on notice boards, along with photographs of the candidates to aid voter identification.

The final picture of the contest, however, will emerge after the deadline for withdrawal of nominations, which is set for March 26 at 3 p.m.

The ECI reiterated that all processes have been carried out in accordance with laid-down norms, with an emphasis on fairness and transparency. With scrutiny now complete, attention will shift to the withdrawal phase, after which the electoral battle lines will be clearly drawn across the states heading into polling day.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Kerala with 985 candidates for 140 seats! That's almost 7 candidates per seat on average. Voters will have a tough time choosing, but more choice is always better. Hope all candidates focus on real issues like development and jobs.
R
Rahul R
The number of candidates in Karnataka by-polls is shocking - 50 for just 2 seats! Sometimes too many candidates just splits the vote and leads to unstable results. EC should maybe think about increasing the security deposit to discourage non-serious candidates.
A
Anjali F
As a first-time voter from Tamil Nadu, I'm excited! The process seems very organized. Displaying candidate photos is a great help for people like my grandparents who might not read well. Now waiting for the withdrawal deadline to see the final list.
M
Michael C
Observing from abroad, India's electoral process continues to impress with its scale and procedural rigor. The scrutiny process being completed in a single day for so many candidates is quite efficient. Best wishes for peaceful and fair elections.
K
Karthik V
While the process seems transparent, I hope the EC is also rigorously checking the backgrounds of these 2000+ candidates - criminal cases, asset declarations, etc. That's equally important for clean governance. The real test is after March 26th.

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