Bharat

Bharatiya Mazdoor Sangh announces new national office bearers for 2026–2029; S Mallesham elected BMS President

The Bharatiya Mazdoor Sangh (BMS) elected its new national office-bearers for the 2026–2029 term at its three-day triennial conference in Puri, Odisha. S. Mallesham (Telangana) was elected President and Surendra Kumar Pandey (Chhattisgarh) General Secretary, along with other key office bearers

Published by
Dr Samanwaya Nanda

BHUBANESWAR: The Bharatiya Mazdoor Sangh (BMS) has elected its new national office bearers for the 2026–2029 term during its three-day triennial national conference held in Puri, Odisha. The election was held in the presence of delegates from across the country.

S Mallesham of Telangana has been elected as the President of the organisation, while Surendra Kumar Pandey from Chhattisgarh has been chosen as the General Secretary.

Other key members elected to the national committee include Anish Mishra (Delhi) as Finance Secretary, B. Surendran as Organising Secretary, Ganesh Mishra as Joint Organising Secretary, and Paljeet Parmar as Office Secretary.

The newly elected Vice Presidents are Sukhwinder Singh Dikky (Punjab), Neeta Choubey (Vidarbha), Ashok Shukla (Uttar Pradesh), Unnikrishnan Unninathan (Kerala), Rajendra Sharma (Rajasthan), Pawan Kumar (Delhi), and Jignesh Mazumdar (Gujarat).

The Secretaries elected to the committee are Ramnath Ganeshe (Madhya Pradesh), Anjali Patel (Odisha), Radheshyam Jaiswal (Chhattisgarh), Arvind Mishra (Madhya Pradesh), Ashok Kumar (Haryana), Anil Dumne (Maharashtra), and Sanjay Kumar Sinha (Bihar).

The newly elected leadership will guide the organisation over the next three years, focusing on strengthening workers’ rights, advancing labour welfare, and promoting balanced and inclusive industrial development across the country.

Meanwhile, earlier the Bharatiya Mazdoor Sangh (BMS), India’s largest trade union organisation, has called for the universal application of labour laws to all workers without any exclusion, asserting that such a move is essential to achieve Antyodaya, the upliftment of the last and most marginalised worker. The demand formed the core of four major resolutions adopted at the organisation’s three-day triennial national conference n held in Puri, Odisha, from February 6 to 8, 2026.

The resolutions, adopted after extensive deliberations by delegates from across the country, will be forwarded to the Central government for appropriate action. The conference reaffirmed Antyodaya as BMS’s guiding philosophy and resolved to align all organisational efforts toward building a strong, inclusive, and socially just India.

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