The most critical number in West Bengal's 2026 election is not 294 — the total seats in the state assembly. It is not even 148 - the majority mark to get to the ruling side of the House. It is not 158 or 130 — the BJP and TMC tallies in the poll of polls, announced soon after the polling ended on April 29. It is 9,102,577, voter names the Election Commission removed from Bengal's rolls before this election. For better understanding of the magnitude of this number, this figure of 9 million is more than Switzerland's population, which stands at 8.9 million as of 2024-2025, according to the Swiss Federal Statistical Office. And these many voters were gone from the electoral map in a single pre-election voter roll revision, the Special Intensive
Revision (SIR), conducted between October 2025 and April 2026. The precise demographic and geographic impact of this exercise will only become clear on May 4, when the counting begins in the swing seats where deleted names outnumber the margins that decided the last election.Nandigram And Beyond: Constituencies To Watch Closely in West Bengal Election 2026West Bengal's 2026 result will be decided in a cluster of constituencies that have changed hands in every significant election since 2011. In many of them, the voter roll revision has made the 2021 result an unreliable guide to 2026. That is where this story begins.
The SIR List That Rewrote The Seat Map
A total of 9,102,577 voters were removed from West Bengal's electoral rolls during the SIR exercise. The state's total eligible electorate reduced by 11.88 per cent, from 76,637,529 to 67,534,952. After supplementary additions, the final voter count stood at 68,251,008.Amid protests, the revision process began in December 2025, initially leaving out 58 lakh names. Then there was another level of scrutiny leading to further deletions, and 27 lakh names were removed in early April 2026. West Bengal’s total electorate dropped around 12 per cent – from 7.6 crore in 2024 to 6.7 crore, according to the Election Commission of India SIR Draft Roll, December 2025.This figure could alter the political landscape of individual constituencies decisively.
The political battle over what the SIR means is still up for debate. Of the deleted names, 63 per cent were Hindus and 34 per cent were Muslims, according to booth-level analysis of ECI data cited by The Tribune and The Federal. The centre's claim is that they cleaned an inflated list of duplicate and deceased voters. Incumbent Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee moved the Supreme Court, calling it partisan. The Left called it an assault on the constitutional right to vote.But when you do the maths and scan through the numbers – the swing seat conversation gets serious. In Bongaon South, a BJP-held seat that the party won by roughly 2,000 votes in 2021, nearly 7,000 names were deleted. In Kalyani, another BJP-held seat won by approximately 2,000 votes, deletions touched 9,000. Of Kolkata's 16 seats, deleted names exceed the winning margin in 14 of them, according to an analysis of ECI results and CEO West Bengal SIR deletion data. Of the 16 seats in the Kolkata belt, only Beleghata and Bhabanipur recorded SIR deletions lower than the previous victory margin — in the remaining 14, deleted names exceeded the winning margin entirely.For the context: When the number of deleted voters exceeds the margin by which a seat was won or lost, the seat's 2021 result is no longer a reliable predictor of 2026. That applies across dozens of constituencies — which is why the swing seat map this year is larger and more unpredictable than any previous Bengal election.
The Three Elections That Built The Current Map
In 2011, Mamata Banerjee’s Trinamool ended 34 years of the Left Front rule, winning 184 seats. In 2016, TMC returned with 211 seats, its highest ever. With this, Mamata Banerjee-led Trinamool became the first party to win Bengal without an ally since 1962. The BJP had just three seats in 2016. By 2021, after the BJP's aggressive CAA-NRC campaign and rapid booth-level expansion, it surged to 77 seats. TMC won 213.For the context: The BJP's CAA-NRC pitch promised citizenship to Hindu refugees from Bangladesh under the Citizenship Amendment Act, while the proposed National Register of Citizens triggered fears among Muslims and migrants of being declared illegal.
Also Read: Once A Left Citadel, Then A TMC Fortress, Now Saffron's Biggest Prize? West Bengal Decides On May 4That arc — Left collapse, TMC consolidation, BJP surge, TMC recovery — happened across the same geography, in many of the same constituencies, across fifteen years. The seats that swung between the Left and TMC in 2011 are often the same seats that swung between TMC and BJP in 2019-2021. Understanding which belt those seats sit in is the only way to read the 2026 map.
South Bengal: The Only Number That Matters
Everything starts here.North 24 Parganas holds 33 seats. South 24 Parganas holds 31. Add Kolkata's 11 and Howrah's 16 — and 91 of Bengal's 294 assembly seats sit in this single contiguous South Bengal belt. In 2021, despite the BJP's most aggressive campaign in its Bengal history, TMC won 96 of these 111 Presidency division seats. The BJP won 14. In the 2024 Lok Sabha elections, the BJP led in 21 of these segments and the TMC in 90.A senior TMC minister told PTI: "If we retain North and South 24 Parganas, Kolkata and Howrah, Bengal stays with us." A senior BJP leader said the mirror image: "Without breaching North 24 Parganas, Kolkata and Howrah, there is no route to power for us."Both are correct. South Bengal is simultaneously TMC's strongest fortress and BJP's most necessary breakthrough. It has been this way since 2011, and it remains true in 2026. Notably, in South Bengal specifically, the deletions have gone deep into both parties' voter bases.
North 24 Parganas: The Matua Variable
Within the South Bengal belt, North 24 Parganas carries its own specific sub-story, and it’s worth separating out.Bordering Bangladesh and housing a large Bengali Hindu refugee population, it has a decisive Matua community vote in at least 14 seats. In 2021, the BJP's most wins in the Presidency division were concentrated largely in Nadia and North 24 Parganas. In South 24 Parganas, Howrah, and most of Kolkata, the party failed to convert momentum into seats. In the 2024 Lok Sabha polls, BJP led in 11 assembly segments in Nadia and 8 in North 24 Parganas but could not lead in any segment in South 24 Parganas.The BJP's CAA promise gave it a structural story to tell in this belt that Mamata Banerjee and her party, the TMC, have never been able to fully neutralise. In 2026, CAA remains a live issue in North 24 Parganas. So does the voter roll because many of those deleted names in this district are from Matua households, which traditionally lean towards the BJP.The impact of the SIR is not limited to Muslim voters. In Nadia district, which has a relatively larger Hindu population, as much as 78 per cent of names faced deletion in some areas. Many of those affected are believed to be from the Matua community, a Hindu refugee group from Bangladesh, largely the BJP voter base. That detail probably dismisses the narrative that the deletions uniformly helped the BJP.
The Numbers That Rewrote Constituencies Overnight
According to ECI constituency-level SIR data, Murshidabad district recorded 455,137 deletions, Malda 239,375, and North 24 Parganas lost over 12.6 lakh names across both phases of the revision — making it the single most affected district in the state in absolute terms. Together, these three districts account for a disproportionate share of the total 91 lakh deletions statewide — and all three have significant Muslim populations. Murshidabad has a Muslim majority of 67 per cent, Malda 51 per cent, and North 24 Parganas has pockets of dense Muslim concentration along the Bangladesh border, according to Census 2011 data.What makes the district-level deletion data politically significant is not the absolute numbers alone — it is where those deletions land within individual constituencies. In Murshidabad's Jangipur constituency, around 35000 voters were struck off the roll for what the Election Commission called "logical discrepancies".For the context: According to Election Commission of India SIR data published by CEO West Bengal, 36,581 voters were struck off Jangipur's roll. After analysing the official deletion data, cross-referenced with Census 2011 demographic data, found approximately 32,500 of those deleted were Muslim — shifting the constituency's Hindu-Muslim voter ratio from 46:54 before the SIR to 52:48 after it.In Lalgola, another Murshidabad constituency, approximately 52,000 of the 55,000 names were deleted, most of whom were Muslims. In Bhagabangola, more than 45000 names were removed and of those only 3,000 were Hindu. In Raghunathganj, 43,000 of the 46,100 deleted names were Muslim. In Suti, more than 34,000 of the 38,000 removed names were from the minority community. Constituency after constituency in Murshidabad tells the same story — deletions concentrated overwhelmingly in Muslim voter pools in seats where the margin between winning and losing has historically been decided by a few thousand votes.
Jangalmahal: The Belt That Swings Every Election
Jangalmahal, spanning Paschim Medinipur, Jhargram, Purulia, and Bankura, still is Bengal's most volatile geographic belt.According to ORF's analysis of Bengal election data, between 2016 and 2019, Bankura, West Bardhaman, and Darjeeling districts saw a complete swing to the BJP from other parties — BJP was leading in every assembly segment across these three districts. Purulia and Jhargram retained only one TMC segment each. In 2021, TMC recovered Bankura and West Bardhaman comprehensively. Darjeeling stayed with BJP.In 2021, approximately 30 seats in the Jangalmahal belt went to BJP. Many of those same seats had been Left strongholds before 2011, swung to TMC in 2011-2016, swung toward BJP in 2019, and swung back to TMC in 2021. They have changed hands in every significant election of the last fifteen years. There is no structural data that reliably predicts which way they move in 2026.
The Seat Maths In Plain Terms
Opinion polls suggest TMC's statewide vote share sits at ~43–47% per cent and BJP's at ~40–42 percent — a gap of approximately 2-3 percentage points. In Bengal, where dozens of seats are decided by margins under 5,000 votes, that percentage gap translates into dramatically different seat tallies depending entirely on where the swing falls geographically.In 2021, the vote share gap between TMC and BJP was approximately 10 percentage points. The seat gap was 136. In 2026, with a projected vote share gap of 2-3 points, the seat outcome is even more sensitive to geographic distribution. Twenty seats in the right districts — or the wrong districts — can change the election results entirely.The poll of polls gives BJP 158 seats and TMC 130. That 28-seat gap is not a comfortable BJP lead. This election is not a straightforward contest between two parties with stable voter bases. It is a contest between two parties with partially redrawn voter bases.One more variable has now entered the picture. With repolls ordered across 285 booths in Falta constituency, the complete electoral picture of West Bengal will not emerge on May 4 alone. The booths under repoll will be declared on May 21. In an election where the poll of polls margin is 28 seats (as per exit polls), a handful of constituencies held back from the May 4 count is not a footnote. It is a live variable.May 4 begins the counting. It may not end it.