
After its crushing defeat in the 2026 West Bengal Assembly elections at the hands of the BJP, the Trinamool Congress (TMC) s influence appears to be on the decline. This was also reflected by the results in the Falta seat after a recent repolling, where the Ma... After its crushing defeat in the 2026 West Bengal Assembly elections at the hands of the BJP, the Trinamool Congress (TMC)’s influence appears to be on the decline. This was also reflected by the results in the Falta seat after a recent repolling, where the Mamata Banerjee-led party finished fourth behind the winner BJP and the runner-up CPI(M) with the Congress getting third position. The Falta outcome has raised a crucial question: Will the TMC be able to regain ground in Bengal’s political landscape, or whether that vacuum be filled up by the Left and Congress? It remains to be seen, however, if the CPI(M) and the Congress could again forge an alliance in a bid to fill the vacuum in state politics left by the TMC. In the 2024 Lok Sabha elections, the Left-Congress alliance managed to lead in just 12 of the state’s 294 Assembly segments. While the Congress led in 11 segments, including the Baharampur segment under the Baharampur Lok Sabha seat and the Suti segment under the Jangipur parliamentary constituency, the CPI(M) led in just one segment – Raninagar under the Murshidabad Lok Sabha seat. The Congress had also led in the Farakka and Samserganj segments of Murshidabad district, besides the Mothabari, Sujapur, Ratua, Malatipur, Harishchandrapur and Chanchal segments in Malda district, and the Chakulia segment in North Dinajpur district. The 2026 Assembly elections provided a partial answer to the question of how much of 2024 Lok Sabha vote share belonged to the Congress and to the CPI(M)-led Left. At the same time, the Assembly verdict has raised speculations over future political equations in the state given that the Congress won just two Assembly seats and the CPI(M) only one after contesting the polls separately. Expressing concern over the Assembly poll results, a senior TMC leader said, “We never imagined our party would almost collapse after the election result. Both Mamata Banerjee and Abhishek Banerjee are not coming out of their residence, and after Falta, we are sure our main strength – minority votes – shifted to the CPI(M) and Congress. If this continues, the CPI(M) and Congress will gain support at the grassroots level, especially the minority vote bank.” The CPI(M), too, sees the prospect of gaining ground at the TMC’s expense. A CPI(M)’s Bengal State Committee member said, “It was the Congress that decided not to ally with us in this Assembly election. The Congress won two seats, and the CPI(M) and its ally Indian Secular Front (ISF) won one seat each. If Left, Congress and ISF had fought together in this Assembly election, we would have won at least 15 seats, but unfortunately, that did not happen. We are trying to strike an alliance in the