Bharatiya Janata Party – West Bengal


Bharatiya Janata PartyWest Bengal also known as the West Bengal BJP or Bengal BJP, is the Bharatiya Janata Party affiliate in the Indian state of West Bengal. The party is based in Kolkata and is led by chair Samik Bhattacharya.
The party holds 2 seats in the Rajya Sabha and 12 seats in the Lok Sabha from the state. Furthermore, the party has 65 seats in the West Bengal Legislative Assembly.

History

Predecessors and formation

The origins of the BJP lies in the Bharatiya Jana Sangh (BJS) and the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS). Syama Prasad Mukherjee, the founder of the BJS, was born in Calcutta (Now Kolkata), while K. B. Hedgewar, the founder of the RSS also studied in the city. In the 1960s, plenty of RSS offices opened across the state. They mostly worked with Marwari traders as well as migrants from eastern Uttar Pradesh and Bihar, in Kolkata's Burrabazar. By late 1960s, local meetings were conducted in Bengali as well.

1980s

The BJP started its operation within the state from the grassroots level of governance, particularly the panchayat politics. The party also used various cultural icons in the state, including Bankim Chandra Chatterjee and Swami Vivekananda in its election campaigns.
The Bharatiya Janata Party contested the West Bengal assembly election for the first time in 1982 [West Bengal Legislative Assembly election|1982]. The primary objective of the party was to create a nucleus for a future third force in West Bengal politics. The party supported the call of the West Bengal government to hold the elections in March 1982. The party contested on 52 assembly constituencies and got around 129,994 votes in the state.
In 1984 Lok Sabha election, BJP contested on 9 seats and got 101165 votes in West Bengal.
In the 1987 West [Bengal Legislative Assembly election|1987] the party contested on 57 constituencies and slightly increased its votes to 134,867.
In 1989 Lok Sabha election, BJP contested on 19 seats and got 529618 votes in West Bengal.

1990s

The Bharatiya Janata Party fielded 291 candidates across the state in 1991 Vidhan Sabha election, and managed to increase its share of votes from 0.51% in 1987 to 11.34%. This was the first time BJP fielded such a large number of candidates in West Bengal assembly elections. The party also fielded 42 candidates for the 1991 Lok Sabha election which took place simultaneously with the Vidhan Sabha election. The BJP got 3624974 votes in this election. Rather than focusing primarily on the Ayodhya issue, which was highlighted in the BJP campaigns across the country, the West Bengal BJP campaign concentrated on agitations against immigration from Bangladesh. The campaign sought to invoke Bengali memories of Partition. While support for BJP increased among Bengali communities, its main stronghold in the state remained non-Bengali populations in Calcutta. Besides this, the party was able to mobilize the rural voters who were not benefitted from Left government's land reforms.
In 1996, both Assembly election and Lok Sabha election took place simultaneously, the party contested on 292 assembly constituencies and got 2,372,480 votes and contested 42 Lok Sabha seats and got 2525864 votes across the state.
In 1998, the BJP contested on 14 seats and won 1 Lok Sabha seat for the first time in West Bengal from Dum Dum. It got 3724662 votes. Tapan Sikdar, who was serving as the West Bengal State President of BJP, won the Dum Dum constituency with 631,383 votes defeating nearest rival Nirmal Kanti Chatterjee of the CPI (M).
In 1999, the BJP in an alliance with All India Trinamool Congress contested 13 seats and won 2 Lok Sabha seats and got 3,928,424 votes. The two elected Member of Parliament, Lok Sabha were Satyabrata Mookherjee from Krishnanagar with 43.82% votes and Tapan Sikdar from Dum Dum with 51.59% votes.

2000s

In 2001 Assembly election, BJP contested on 266 constituencies and got 1901351 votes throughout the state and 5.68% in seats contested.
In the 2004 Indian general election, the National Democratic Alliance was completely decimated by CPI (M) led Left Front and INC led United Progressive Alliance. The BJP didn't win a single seat and its ally All India Trinamool Congress was reduced to just 1 Lok Sabha seat. The BJP however managed to get 2983950 votes.
In the 2006 Assembly election, BJP entered into an alliance with the All India Trinamool Congress and contested on 29 constituencies. The BJP got 760236 votes throughout West Bengal and 19.89% on seats it contested.
In 2009 Indian general election, BJP candidate Jaswant Singh, with support from Gorkha Janmukti Morcha, won the Darjeeling Lok Sabha seat getting a total of 4,97,649 votes. Across the state BJP got only 6.14% votes.

2010s

In 2011 Legislative Assembly election the BJP allied with GJM.
In 2014 Indian general election the BJP won only 2 seats. BJP candidates for the first time, returned runner-up in 3 seats and got 17.2% vote share throughout the state. This performance was better than BJP's previous best of 11.66% in 1991 elections. However the All India Trinamool Congress dominated the election winning 34 seats.
In 2016 Assembly election the BJP in an alliance with GJM contested 291 seats and got 5,555,134 votes and created history by winning 3 assembly seats for the first time.
There was a major political shift from the left to the right in the [2019 Indian general election in West Bengal|2019 Lok Sabha election in West Bengal]. The Bharatiya Janata Party, won 18 Lok Sabha seats out of the 42 constituencies with 23,028,343 votes. On 24 May 2019, The Statesman reported that BJP had made CPI-M a marginalised party and setting a strong challenge to the ruling Trinamool Congress. The shift in the voting pattern was seen across the state.
After the election the Government of India passed the Citizenship (Amendment) Act, 2019 in the Parliament, allowing a quicker route to citizenship to non Muslim immigrants from neighbouring countries. The party hoped to benefit from the votes of the Hindu immigrants from Bangladesh.

Post 2020

The BJP's Bengali booklet released in January 2020 claimed that the National Register of Citizens will be implemented to identify any undocumented migrants including Hindus, Sikhs, Muslims and non-Muslims by the Citizenship Amendment Act.
In 2021 Assembly election the BJP in an alliance with AJSU contested 293 seats and got 28,968,281 votes and created history by winning 77 assembly seats for the first time and becoming the second largest party and the official opposition. Ahead of the election, numerous politicians from other parties, including the governing Trinamool Congress, joined the BJP. Notably, Suvendu Adhikari and Mihir Goswami, both of whom switched parties before the elections, were appointed as leader of opposition and deputy leader of opposition in the legislative assembly respectively.

Organizational Structure

The following is the current organizational structure of the Bharatiya Janata Party – West Bengal as of January 2026:

List of State Presidents

No.NameTerm in office
1Haripada Bharati1980–1982
2Vishnu Kant Shastri1982–1986
3Sukumar Banerjee1986–1991
4Tapan Sikdar1991–1995
Vishnu Kant Shastri1995–1997
Tapan Sikdar1997–1999
5Ashim Kumar Ghosh1999–2002
6Tathagata Roy2002–2006
Sukumar Banerjee2006–2008
7Satyabrata Mookherjee2008–2009
8Rahul Sinha2009–2015
9Dilip Ghosh2015–2021
10Sukanta Majumdar2021–2025
11Samik Bhattacharya2025–Incumbent

Electoral performance

Local elections

Municipal Corporation


Leadership

The West Bengal BJP has one president, twelve vice-presidents and five general secretaries & twelve secretaries. As of July 2025, the President of the West Bengal state branch of the party is Samik Bhattacharya.
Dilip Ghosh is the most successful president. During his leadership party gain 18 MP in 2019 lok sabha election. And in 2021 Vidhan sabha election party gain 77 MLA.

Current elected members

Defections, deaths and resignations since 2021

The BJP had won 77 seats in the 2021 elections. However, owing to several of its MLAs resigning, defecting to the Trinamool Congress and one death, the BJP's seats gradually reduced to 65.

General and cited sources

*