West Bengal’s Birbhum district, a patchwork of rural landscapes and demographic divides, mirrors the state’s cutthroat politics. From its Leftist past to TMC’s current dominance, the region resists BJP’s persistent advances. Northern fringes near Murshidabad are Muslim-dominated, while southern and western pockets host Hindu majorities interspersed with pivotal SC/ST communities, especially Santhals.
Seven assembly seats feed into Birbhum’s Lok Sabha constituency. The 2021 elections, marked by intense polarization, handed TMC a clean sweep bar one. Murarai’s overwhelming Muslim support propelled TMC’s Mosarraf Hossain to a landslide over 45% margin. Nalhati followed suit, with Rajendra Narayan Das securing 28% lead thanks to tactical minority consolidation.
In Hansan, where farming drives the economy and minorities wield influence, Ashok Kumar Chattopadhyay coasted to victory for TMC. Rampurhat’s diverse electorate pushed Ashish Banerjee, a key TMC figure and deputy speaker, to a tense 4% win. Suri, the urban-tinged Hindu-Dalit hub, gave Bikash Roy Choudhury a slim 3.4% edge.
Sainthia’s SC voters, enamored by welfare initiatives like Lakshmir Bhandar, delivered a thumping mandate to Nilabati Saha. Only Dubrajpur (SC) held out for BJP, as Anup Kumar Saha edged out TMC by 1.9% amid the green wave.
Birbhum thrives on agriculture for 80% of its people, led by MP Shatabdi Roy’s commanding presence. Her 2024 Lok Sabha triumph at 47% overshadowed Congress’s surprise 14.81% vote haul for Milton Rashid—up nearly 10%—and BJP’s 5% decline.
Polling dates set for April 23 and 29 in two phases, with results on May 4, come after Mamata’s preemptive strikes: arrears for staff and pensioners, plus Rs 500 raise for religious functionaries. BJP eyes cracks in TMC’s armor, but Birbhum’s vote arithmetic remains a steep climb.