BJP's "Bikosito Paschim Banga" Drive Seeks Public Input for Bengal Manifesto

The BJP has launched an intensive public outreach campaign, "Bikosito Paschim Banga," to gather citizen input for its 2026 West Bengal Assembly election manifesto. Party workers are visiting households and booths to collect suggestions from all sections of society, with over 2.5 lakh submissions received already. The campaign criticizes the current state governance, pledging to focus on transparency, employment, and ending corruption. BJP leaders emphasize that the manifesto aims to be a people-centric document reflecting the hopes and challenges of everyday Bengalis.

Key Points: BJP Launches Public Outreach for West Bengal 2026 Manifesto

  • Booth-level outreach for manifesto suggestions
  • Aims to end "15 years of exploitative governance"
  • Over 2.5 lakh suggestions received so far
  • Campaign includes diaspora consultations and aspiration boxes
3 min read

BJP launches "Bikosito Paschim Banga" drive to shape 2026 West Bengal manifesto

BJP's "Bikosito Paschim Banga" campaign gathers citizen suggestions to shape its 2026 West Bengal election manifesto, aiming for over 5 lakh inputs.

"Your voice matters. Your suggestions matter. Because the future of West Bengal matters. - Samik Bhattacharya"

New Delhi, February 19

BJP has intensified its ground-level preparations for the upcoming West Bengal Assembly polls, with its manifesto outreach campaign, "Bikosito Paschim Banga Sankalp Patra, Paramarsha Sangraha Abhiyan," launched on February 7, aimed at gathering citizens' aspirations.

The campaign, which will conclude by the end of February, seeks suggestions from industrialists, educators, businesspeople, teachers, doctors, students, housewives, farmers, the Bengali diaspora, and other sections of society.

Party workers are visiting every booth and household to listen to grievances and expectations, treating the BJP as a family that engages with all.

The objectives of the Abhiyan include ensuring that from a farmer's plough to a youth's startup, every dream feeds the future blueprint. BJP believes it is a social contract, not just a political promise. Citizens can share suggestions by calling 9727 294 294, emailing, scanning a QR code, or using designated hashtags. "Akanksha Sangraha Baksho" (aspiration boxes) have been placed in each district for written proposals.

The campaign says it aims to end 15 years of exploitative governance, unemployment, and corruption, replacing them with a transparent, employment-focused West Bengal. Core goals include bringing migrant workers home and creating local jobs for talented youth. BJP said, "Your thought, our resolve; your aspiration, our path; your dream, our commitment," inviting all residents, regardless of religion or caste, to participate.

So far, over 2.5 lakh suggestions have been received, and the party expects more than 5 lakh by the end of February, with strong positive feedback. The outreach also includes online consultations with the Bengali diaspora, scientists, scholars, and others, as well as town-hall meetings and public consultations in Kolkata, and meetings with farmers and fishermen, BJP leader Anirban Ganguly told ANI.

Meanwhile, BJP West Bengal state president Samik Bhattacharya wrote to the citizens, stressing, "Your voice matters. Your suggestions matter. Because the future of West Bengal matters." He highlighted that Bengal, a historic cradle of civilisation, culture, and courage, has always contributed to nation-building, and its true strength lies in its people's experiences and aspirations.

Explaining the manifesto drafting process, Samik Bhattacharya said, "The manifesto should be more than a political document--it must mirror the hopes, challenges and expectations of everyday West Bengalis." He invited "considered suggestions" on education, employment, healthcare, women's empowerment, youth development, agriculture, industry, MSMEs, infrastructure, culture, sports, environment, law and order, and good governance.

Emphasising inclusivity, he added that the exercise is open to all, regardless of political ideology, as state development is a shared responsibility. Constructive insights will make the Sankalp Patra people-centric, development-oriented, and rooted in Bengal's rich heritage. He called for a collective effort to build a West Bengal where security, opportunity, dignity, and prosperity are accessible to every citizen.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
As a teacher, I appreciate the focus on education in their consultation. Bengal's education system needs serious reform. I will definitely send my suggestions. Hope they listen to the ground reality and not just make another 'chunavi jumla'. 🤞
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Rohit P
2.5 lakh suggestions already? That's impressive outreach. My only worry is whether these suggestions will truly shape the manifesto or if it's just a PR exercise. The proof will be in the final document. Action speaks louder than words.
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Sarah B
I'm part of the Bengali diaspora in the US. It's heartening to see they want to include NRI perspectives online. Bengal has so much potential in tech and startups. If they create the right ecosystem, many of us would consider coming back to contribute. Fingers crossed!
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Meera T
The focus on women's empowerment and safety is crucial. Kolkata doesn't feel as safe as it used to. I hope they have concrete plans for better policing and opportunities for women entrepreneurs. Will be watching closely.
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Karthik V
Respectfully, this all sounds good on paper. But Bengal needs stability and development, not more political polarization. I hope whichever party comes to power focuses on actual governance and lifts the state from its current economic slump. The manifesto should be practical, not poetic.
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