KOLKATA/NEW DELHI: Baharampur’s political weight cannot be understood without its past. Established in 1757 following the Battle of Plassey, the town became one of the earliest administrative and military bases of the East India Company in India.
Over time, it evolved into a commercial hub drawing European trading interests, including the Dutch and the French.
This layered past has translated into a politically conscious electorate, where identity, history, and local pride continue to influence voting behaviour. In many ways, Baharampur reflects a blend of historical legacy and modern political contestation.
For decades, Baharampur remained a stronghold of the Congress, largely under the influence of Adhir Ranjan Chowdhury, who represented the seat in Lok Sabha five times between 1999 and 2024.
However, the political script flipped dramatically in the 2021 West Bengal assembly elections when the BJP’s Subrata Maitra emerged victorious.
His win not only broke Congress’s long-standing dominance but also signalled the saffron party’s deepening footprint in Murshidabad — a district once considered out of bounds for the BJP.
Maitra’s nearly 45% vote share marked a massive leap from BJP’s marginal presence in 2016, while both Congress and TMC lagged behind, underlining a major political realignment.
The 2024 Lok Sabha elections delivered another twist. Chowdhury, long seen as invincible in Baharampur, was defeated by Yusuf Pathan of the Trinamool Congress by a margin exceeding 85,000 votes.
The loss marked a sharp dip in Chowdhury’s vote share and exposed the growing impact of communal polarisation and shifting loyalties in the region — factors that continue to echo in the current assembly battle. It also raised questions about whether legacy politics can withstand new-age electoral dynamics.
Triangular contest or bipolar fight? Narratives clash on the ground.
The upcoming assembly election is officially a three-cornered contest involving BJP’s Maitra, TMC’s Naru Gopal Mukherjee, and Congress veteran Chowdhury.
Yet, narratives differ sharply:
A recurring theme in Baharampur is religious polarisation. While Murshidabad district has a Muslim majority, Baharampur constituency itself has nearly 70% Hindu voters.
Issues influencing voter sentiment include:
Ground reports suggest that “security” has emerged as a central election issue.
Baharampur’s urban areas have reportedly become a refuge for Hindus from neighbouring pockets affected by communal tensions.
This has amplified:
The campaign has also witnessed sharp exchanges, with leaders accusing each other of appeasement and selective outreach. Subrata Maitra has alleged community-specific bias by rivals, while Adhir Ranjan Chowdhury has countered by positioning himself as a leader with cross-community acceptance.
Such rhetoric reflects the deeper currents of polarisation shaping not just voter perception but also campaign strategy.
Chowdhury’s comeback gamble after Lok Sabha setback.
For Chowdhury, this election is more than just another contest — it is a political comeback bid after his 2024 defeat.
He argues that:
Mukherjee, representing TMC, has built his campaign around local governance and incremental vote share gains. Despite a 12.5% increase in 2021, he fell short of overtaking BJP.
This time, TMC is:
BJP’s consolidation strategy:
Welfare plus polarisation pitch
Maitra’s campaign focuses heavily on:
Interestingly, observers believe that developments outside Baharampur — including communal tensions in nearby regions and broader political narratives — are influencing voter choices more than strictly local issues.
This trend, first noticed in 2021, appears to have deepened, making the constituency a reflection of wider socio-political currents in West Bengal.
Local observers describe Baharampur as one of the most closely watched constituencies in the state.
The contest hinges on:
For now, the seat remains too close to call — a rare three-way contest shaped as much by history as by present-day political churn, with each player holding a plausible path to victory.