From 2016 to 2021, BJP plateaued at 60 seatsI in Assam — will 2026 be different?

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From 2016 to 2021, BJP plateaued at 60 seatsI in Assam — will 2026 be different?

Guwahati: As Assam heads into the assembly elections, the big question is whether chief minister Himanta Biswa Sarma can finally push BJP past the halfway mark in the 126-member legislative assembly on its own.The halfway mark of 63 seats has remained tantalisingly out of reach for BJP so far. Even in 2016, when the party emerged victorious for the first time, dethroning a 15-year-old Congress govt, it finished at 60 seats. Five years later, in 2021, the tally was identical — 60 again — forcing the party to rely on allies to stitch together a majority on both occasions.Similarly, BJP’s Lok Sabha trajectory in the state has also remained flat over the last two polls, holding steady at nine seats in both 2019 and 2024 after rising from seven in 2014.

However, what has shifted is the gradual strengthening of its vote share — from 36.86% in 2014 to 37.89% in 2024, indicating consolidation rather than expansion.In 2026, armed with a delimitation that shrunk minority-dominated decisive constituencies, targeted welfare schemes for women, students and youth, and a record of fulfilled job promises, the saffron party is eyeing a solo majority.The BJP’s campaign narrative is clear — development delivered, identity protected, and more promises lined up for the next five years.

Whether that translates into a clean majority will depend on its ability to convert strength into actual wins.For BJP, breaching the halfway mark would not just be a numerical victory. It would mark a decisive shift in Assam’s political landscape, where allies once mattered but may soon become optional.BJP racing home on its own will result in state’s political arithmetic changing dramatically. Its allies, Asom Gana Parishad (AGP), Bodoland People’s Front (BPF) and United People’s Party Liberal (UPPL), could find themselves relegated to the margins.

Their bargaining power in govt formation would evaporate if BJP crosses 63 all by itself.AGP, historically rooted in Assamese sub-nationalism, has already ceded much of its space to BJP’s broader identity plank of jati, mati, bheti (idnetity, land and homeland). A BJP majority would further diminish its relevance.The allies’ survival may then hinge on reinventing themselves — either by carving sharper regional identities or by aligning with opposition forces. But the larger message would be clear, Assam’s coalition era, defined by BJP’s dependence on partners, could give way to a new phase of single-party dominance.For Sarma, it would mean not just retaining power, but proving that Assam can be won outright, without coalition arithmetic.

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