TMC Won’t Ally with Congress in 2026 West Bengal Polls: Mamata Banerjee

Mamata Banerjee confirms TMC will contest 2026 West Bengal Assembly polls solo, ruling out any alliance with Congress. [Image via NDTV]

Kolkata: West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee, on Monday, informed party legislators, that Trinamool Congress (TMC) will be contesting alone in the Bengal Assembly elections in 2026 without having any understanding with another party including Congress.

She told party legislators while having a meeting with the members of the party’s legislative team in the West Bengal Assembly before the commencement of the first day of the budget session of the house on Monday afternoon.

“Congress has nothing in West Bengal. So there is no question of having an alliance with Congress in the state. Trinamool Congress [TMC] will be contesting alone in West Bengal. We will form the government again for the fourth time in 2026 securing a two-thirds majority,” the Chief Minister said at the meeting as claimed by a senior member of the state cabinet.

However, the state cabinet member added that during the meeting the Chief Minister had squarely blamed Congress for the result of the recently concluded Delhi Assembly polls where BJP came to power winning 48 out of 70 seats in the state assembly there.

“In Delhi, Congress did not help the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP). Again in Haryana AAP did not help Congress. As a result, BJP emerged as the victor in both the states. Had Congress and AAP remained united in Delhi and Haryana, the results would not have been such for the opposition in both the states,” the state cabinet minister said quoting Mamata Banerjee.

Also See: Whenever BJP and Congress Want, They Disrupt House, says Kalyan Banerjee

During the meeting, the Chief Minister also reportedly cautioned some of the party legislators whose recent statements made in public had posed immense embarrassment for the party leadership.

The state cabinet member said that the Chief Minister cautioned the leaders on this count that the same mistake repeated again and again cannot be pardoned. Recently, a comment by one such maverick legislator Madan Mitra, claiming that becoming a member of the party’s district committee against money is quite common, had posed immense embarrassment for the leadership.

Although Mr Mitra had already written a letter to the party’s state president in West Bengal Subrata Bakshi apologising for making such a public statement, the party leadership feels that it is high time to caution such loose tongues to be careful in future.

The Chief Minister also gave a strong note of caution against reported events of infighting between two factions of the party mainly at the district- levels. “She specially cautioned the party legislators from Malda and West Burdwan districts,” a legislator present at the meeting said.

This news is sourced from NDTV and is intended for informational purposes only.

News Desk

Your trusted source for insightful journalism. Stay informed with our compelling coverage of global affairs, business, technology, and more.

Recent

Mirage of Indigenization

Mirage of Indigenization

The crash of a Tejas fighter at the Dubai Air Show has exposed deep structural flaws in India’s flagship indigenous aircraft program. With two airframes lost in under two years and only a few hundred verifiable flying hours, the incident raises fresh questions about the LCA’s safety, its decades-long delays, and the strategic vulnerability created by India’s dependence on aging fleets. This piece explores how the Dubai crash fits into the broader struggle of a project that was meant to symbolize self-reliance but now risks becoming a cautionary tale.

Read More »
The US Report on Pakistan’s May Win

The US Report on Pakistan’s May Win

The USCC’s 2025 report delivered a rare moment of clarity in South Asian geopolitics. By openly describing Pakistan’s military success over India, the Commission broke with years of cautious Western language and confirmed a shift many analysts had only hinted at. The report’s wording, and the global reactions that followed, mark a turning point in how the 2025 clash is being understood.

Read More »

Sharia Absolutism at Home, Realpolitik Abroad

The Taliban govern through a stark duality: rigid Sharia enforcement at home paired with flexible, interest-driven diplomacy abroad. Domestically, religion is used to silence women, suppress dissent, and mask governance failures. Yet the same regime that polices Afghan society with severity adopts a pragmatic tone toward India, Russia, and the TTP. This selective morality reflects political survival rather than theology, with lasting implications for Afghanistan and the wider region.

Read More »