In a high-stakes electoral blitz, the BJP has mounted a full-spectrum offensive in West Bengal, deploying its heaviest hitters to challenge Mamata Banerjee’s stronghold. This assembly poll isn’t just about seats—it’s a battle for Bengal’s soul, with the party focusing laser-sharp on ‘syndicate rule’ and unchecked infiltration as key flashpoints.
Amit Shah orchestrated the campaign masterfully, spearheading events from the Parivartan Yatra in late March to relentless April rallies spanning 10 days from the 10th to 27th. His roadshows and pressers painted TMC as a syndicate-infested regime endangering the state’s fabric.
PM Modi’s Vijay Sankalp rallies—from March 14 through April 27 in key hotspots—shifted momentum, blending development promises with direct appeals for change. JP Nadda fired up cadres during March and April tours, while Yogi Adityanath’s 20-plus rallies invoked strong governance models, peaking with April 27 mega-shows.
Every speech echoed a unified war cry: eradicate syndicates strangling businesses and address infiltrators altering Bengal’s identity. The March 28 expose by Shah set the tone, culminating in a barrage framing TMC as barriers to progress.
With enthusiastic voter participation marking record turnouts, Bengal buzzes with anticipation. The May 4 countdown promises to settle whether BJP’s star-powered push delivers ‘Bengal Fatah’ or fortifies TMC’s reign.