advertisement

Balagarh Assembly Election Results 2026

Live Results

Balagarh Assembly Constituency

Balagarh, a block-level town in the Chinsurah subdivision of Hooghly district, is a Scheduled Caste-reserved Assembly constituency and one of the seven segments of the Hooghly Lok Sabha seat. It comprises the Balagarh community development block along with the Chandrahati I, Chandrahati II, Digsui and Mogra I gram panchayats of Chinsurah Mogra block.​

Established in 1951, Balagarh began as a general category seat and was reserved for the Scheduled Castes from the 1977 election onwards. It has voted in all 17 Assembly elections held in the state, along with a by-election in 2007. CPI(M) has been the most successful party here, winning 10 of the 18 contests, including eight consecutive victories between 1977 and 2007, while Congress has won four times, Trinamool Congress three times and the undivided CPI once in 1957.​

Trinamool Congress opened its account in Balagarh in 2011, the year it came to power in the state, when Ashim Kumar Majhi defeated sitting CPI(M) MLA Bhuban Pramanick by 21,583 votes. Majhi retained the seat in 2016, beating CPI(M)’s Panchu Gopal Mondal by 17,837 votes. Trinamool recorded its third successive win in 2021 with a new face, writer-activist Manoranjan Byapari, who defeated BJP’s Subhash Chandra Haldar by 5,784 votes, as CPI(M)’s vote share collapsed to 8.99 per cent, compared to 43 per cent for the BJP and 45.63 per cent for Trinamool Congress.​

Lok Sabha voting in the Balagarh segment reflects the BJP’s rise from the margins. Trinamool Congress dominated in 2009 and 2014, leading CPI(M) by 20,848 votes and 14,858 votes respectively. In 2019, the BJP surged ahead and led Trinamool by 34,054 votes, while CPI(M) fell to 7.21 per cent of the vote. In 2024, the BJP again finished on top here with a lead of 5,947 votes over Trinamool, and CPI(M) remained a distant third on about 7 per cent of the vote, underlining its marginalisation in a former stronghold.​

Balagarh had 263,064 registered voters in 2024, up from 258,955 in 2021 and 249,226 in 2019. Scheduled Castes are the dominant group, accounting for 40.44 per cent of voters, while Scheduled Tribes account for 8.87 per cent and Muslims for 9.60 per cent of the electorate. It is an overwhelmingly rural seat, with 80.64 per cent of voters living in villages and 19.36 per cent in urban pockets. The voter turnout has been both high and steady, at 84.40 per cent in 2011, 85.66 per cent in 2016, 84.54 per cent in 2019, 85.19 per cent in 2021 and 83.42 per cent in 2024.​

Balagarh lies in the Hooghly Flats region of Hooghly district, on the eastern bank of the Hooghly River in southern West Bengal. The terrain is part of the flat alluvial plains of the lower Ganga basin, with fertile soils that support paddy, jute and vegetable cultivation, and the river adds both to its agricultural potential and to periodic flood risks. The local economy depends heavily on agriculture, country boat building and small-scale tile and brick manufacture, with Balagarh’s wooden country boats in particular having a long-standing reputation and even being considered for geographical indication (GI) recognition.​

Balagarh is linked by road and rail to the rest of the Hooghly district and the wider Kolkata region. Chinsurah, the district headquarters, is about 29 km away by rail, as the Balagarh-Chuchura rail distance is 29 km on the Bandel-Katwa section of Eastern Railway. Chinsurah and the nearby urban nodes of Bandel and Hooghly are all reachable within roughly an hour by train or road, integrating Balagarh into the lower Hooghly urban-rural corridor. Kolkata lies roughly 70 to 90 km to the south, accessed via Bandel and the Howrah-Bardhaman main line and the state highway network, which keeps the constituency within feasible commuting and trading distance from the state capital while preserving its largely rural character.​

Balagarh is set up for a close and engaging contest in the 2026 Assembly election, with both the Trinamool Congress and the BJP running almost parallel to each other after their recent performances. The BJP has grown stronger here and has led the segment in the last two Lok Sabha polls, while Trinamool Congress still holds the Assembly seat, though by a much slimmer margin than in 2011 and 2016. The Left Front-Congress alliance has shrunk to the margins and is unlikely to be a decisive factor. The outcome may hinge on a late push in the campaign and organisation, which will determine whether Trinamool manages to retain Balagarh or the BJP finally opens its account in this Scheduled Caste-reserved constituency.

(Ajay Jha)

advertisement

Past Balagarh Assembly Election Results

WINNER

Manoranjan Bapari

img
AITC
Number of Votes 1,00,364
Winning Party Voting %45.6
Winning Margin %2.6

Other Candidates - Balagarh Assembly Constituency

  • Name
    Party
    Votes
  • Subhas Chandra Haldar

    BJP

    94,580
  • Mahamaya Mondal

    CPI(M)

    19,766
  • NOTA

    NOTA

    3,105
  • Sukdeb Biswas

    SUCI

    2,142
WINNER

Ashim Kumar Majhi

img
AITC
Number of Votes 96,472
Winning Party Voting %47.4
Winning Margin %8.8

Other Candidates - Balagarh Assembly Constituency

  • Name
    Party
    Votes
  • Panchu Gopal Mondal

    CPM

    78,635
  • Subash Chandra Halder

    BJP

    20,757
  • NOTA

    NOTA

    3,875
  • Subrata Mondal

    PDS

    2,226
  • Gautam Mondal

    CPI(ML)(L)

    1,718

FAQ's

When will the West Bengal Assembly Elections 2026 be held?
When will voting take place in BALAGARH (SC)?
When will the election result for BALAGARH (SC) be declared?
Who won the Assembly election from BALAGARH (SC) in 2021?
What was the winning vote percentage of AITC in BALAGARH (SC) in 2021?
How many votes did Manoranjan Bapari receive in the 2021 BALAGARH (SC) election?
Who was the runner-up in BALAGARH (SC) in 2021?
How many seats are there in the West Bengal Assembly?
Which party won the last West Bengal Assembly Elections?
When will the West Bengal Assembly Elections 2026 results be announced?
advertisement

Bengal Post-Poll Updates: TMC appoints Kolkata Mayor as Chief Whip, Deputy LoPs also named

West Bengal witnessed a major political development on Saturday as Suvendu Adhikari was sworn in as Chief Minister at a high-profile ceremony in Kolkata. The event was attended by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Union Home Minister Amit Shah, several Union ministers, and Chief Ministers from NDA-ruled states. During the ceremony, PM Modi was seen touching the feet of 98-year-old BJP veteran Makhanlal Sarkar, drawing attention from leaders present at the venue. In a key administrative move, retired IAS officer and former Election Commission special observer for SIR, Subrata Gupta, has been appointed as advisor to the new Chief Minister. Meanwhile, former Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee called upon the Left and other opposition parties to unite and form a "joint platform" against the BJP. In a parallel development, the Trinamool Congress appointed senior leader and 10-time MLA Sobhandeb Chattopadhyay as Leader of Opposition in the West Bengal Assembly.

Video: Yogi Adityanath gifts saffron gamcha to Suvendu Adhikari at his oath-taking

Yogi Adityanath on Saturday presented a saffron gamcha to Suvendu Adhikari, shortly after the latter took oath as the first BJP Chief Minister of West Bengal. The crowd also erupted into a loud cheer as the scene unfolded at the swearing-in ceremony in Kolkata. This was at least the second such instance in recent weeks when the duo's bonhomie was witnessed publicly. Earlier, during the election campaign in the state, a powerful scene was witnessed when Adhikari bowed down at the feet of the UP Chief Minister as a mark of respect.

0:07
advertisement