Kerala Elections 2026: Is a ‘Nightmare’ Brewing for Congress? How BJP Is Set to Blow the ‘Gandhi’ Party from Its Turf
June 25, 2026
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Kerala Elections 2026: Is a ‘Nightmare’ Brewing for Congress? How BJP Is Set to Blow the ‘Gandhi’ Party from Its Turf

Pre-poll surveys show a nail-bitingly close fight between LDF and UDF, with projections often hovering in the 60-80 seat range for both. Congress leaders are still boasting of 100+ seats, but ground realities tell a different story. The BJP is no longer a negligible player polling 15% and winning nothing. It is now a decisive spoiler in 30-40 key seats

Lakshmi RanjithLakshmi Ranjith
Apr 8, 2026, 05:30 pm IST
in Politics, Bharat, Analysis, Kerala
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Kerala Elections 2026: Is a ‘Nightmare’ Brewing for Congress? How BJP Is Set to Blow the ‘Gandhi’ Party from Its Turf

Kerala Goes to Polls on Thursday (April 9)

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As Kerala heads to the polls on April 9, 2026, the Congress-led United Democratic Front (UDF) is walking into what could be its most uncomfortable election in decades — not because of the ruling LDF, but because the BJP-led NDA is quietly turning the state’s traditional bipolar contest into a three-cornered nightmare for the ‘Gandhi’ party. For years, Congress has treated Kerala as its reliable southern turf — a place where it could comfortably alternate power with the Left while banking on minority consolidation and anti-incumbency waves. But 2026 is different. The old comfort zone is cracking, and the BJP is the one wielding the hammer.

That comfortable revolving door is now being forcefully jammed open by the BJP, which is turning several constituencies into triangular contests that hurt the Congress far more than the Left. Many observers credit the shift to the ‘Modi effect’—the personal appeal of Narendra Modi among a segment of the Keralite population. While it is undeniable that a portion of the state has been captivated by the Modi phenomenon, for many others, this fandom is simply the outward expression of a long-simmering resentment toward ‘appeasement’ politics. What looks like a surge in popularity is often a latent anger finally finding its voice through a new political alternative.

Pre-poll surveys show a nail-bitingly close fight between LDF and UDF, with projections often hovering in the 60-80 seat range for both. Congress leaders are still boasting of 100+ seats, but ground realities tell a different story. The BJP is no longer a negligible player polling 15% and winning nothing. It is now a decisive spoiler in 30-40 key seats, apart from winning seats particularly in Thiruvananthapuram, Thrissur, Palakkad, Pathanamthitta, and parts of central Kerala.

Kerala Elections 2026: BJP’s Sudden Surge in a Traditionally Resistant State

  • Suresh Gopi’s historic 2024 Lok Sabha victory in Thrissur shattered the myth that BJP can’t win in Kerala
  • The party’s strong performance in the 2025 Thiruvananthapuram Corporation elections demonstrated real organisational muscle and voter shift, especially among Hindu voters tired of both fronts
  • In multiple urban and semi-urban pockets, the NDA is consolidating Ezhava, Nair, and even some Christian and coastal community votes with a clear development-plus-cultural pride agenda

Congress is caught in a deadly pincer 

  • On one side, it attacks the LDF over governance failures — the 10-year “lost decade,” the fresh 2018 floods man-made controversy involving Krishnankutty, Sabarimala issues, and economic stagnation
  • On the other, it watches helplessly as the BJP chips away at its own traditional Hindu and middle-class base

Every additional percentage point the BJP gains in Congress-leaning seats directly translates into lost marginal votes for UDF candidates, including in key constituencies in the capital. In tight contests, this vote split often tilts the result in favour of the NDA.

The old UDF arithmetic is faltering, as a section of voters no longer wants to choose between what they see as “two sides of the same worn-out coin” — the LDF and UDF duopoly that has delivered decades of largely unproductive politics.

The Congress’s over-reliance on minority vote banks and lack of a strong, unifying chief ministerial face is making things worse. Its desperate “B-team” allegations against both LDF and BJP only expose its panic.

Modi Effect Kicks In: BJP Gained Momentum in Kerala

The BJP’s approach in 2026 is disciplined and visionary. Instead of spreading thin, it is laser-focused on winnable and high-impact seats. It is offering a genuine third alternative: development without dynastic entitlement, governance without ideological hypocrisy, and respect for Kerala’s cultural ethos without the pseudo-secular compromises of the past.

Even the CPI’s internal review of the 2024 local body elections—where the Lotus party registered a historic win—acknowledges that nearly 30% of Ezhava votes and 45% of Nair votes shifted to the BJP.

Backed by strong central leadership and local cadre energy, the NDA is positioning itself as the force that will finally end Kerala’s stagnant “revolving door” politics. Even if it wins only 4-8 seats this time (with internal assessments eyeing double digits in optimistic scenarios), its rising vote share and ability to influence 15-25 outcomes will mark a historic shift. This is how real change begins — not with overnight majority, but by dismantling the old cartel and forcing both LDF and UDF to confront a credible challenger.

The lotus is blooming slowly but surely in God’s Own Country, and the discomfort it is causing the ‘Gandhi’ party is palpable. Kerala 2026 will be remembered as the election where the BJP blew open the Congress’s comfort zone. The old binary is dying.

A new, assertive, development-driven politics is rising. Whether the results bring immediate seats or “surprises” as Suresh Gopi predicts, one truth is clear: the nightmare for Congress in its traditional turf has only just begun — and the BJP is the one making it happen. Voters of Kerala have a real choice this time. The wind of change is blowing.

LDF on the Backfoot: How the Left Is Losing the Battle in Kerala 

The allegation that the 2018 floods — which devastated Kerala and claimed hundreds of lives — were partly man-made is gaining explosive traction on the eve of the polls. A sensational audio recording purportedly of LDF Minister K. Krishnankutty, released by UDF’s Mathew Kuzhalnadan MLA, has rocked the state.

In the clip, Krishnankutty allegedly admits that the disaster was worsened by corruption, deliberate delays in opening the Thottappally spillway, and influence from the black sand/mineral lobby. Kuzhalnadan has hinted that more evidence is coming, leaving the Left firmly on the defensive during this crucial election season. The core charge: Then Irrigation Minister Mathew T. Thomas allegedly delayed scientifically mandated water releases to protect lucrative black sand deposits for private contractors, resulting in massive profits (allegedly ₹300 crore or more) at the cost of public safety.

Even a senior leader from within the LDF fold has now been caught seemingly confirming what the opposition has long claimed — that simultaneous, unplanned opening of multiple dams, combined with blatant violation of the ‘rule curve’, turned a heavy monsoon into a far bigger catastrophe.This internal exposure is particularly damaging because the CAG report has already slammed the LDF government.

The Comptroller and Auditor General audit clearly stated that the Kerala State Electricity Board (KSEB) did not strictly follow standard operating procedures and established norms for dam water level management during the floods. Several dams, including Idamalayar, lacked proper rule curves, and critical flood moderation protocols were ignored — despite the government’s repeated claims of “expert clearance” from the Central Water Commission and IIT Madras.

While Pinarayi Vijayan and his ministers continue to dismiss everything as “election stunt” or “AI-generated,” the damage is done. The Left’s carefully crafted image of efficient disaster management lies in tatters. Ten years of governance marked by alleged mafia influence, corruption in resource sectors, and repeated administrative arrogance has finally caught up — right when voters are deciding the future.

Topics: UDF LDFCongressKerala BJPKerala Election 2026
Lakshmi Ranjith
Lakshmi Ranjith
A digital journalist with over 18 years of experience in mainstream media, she began her career in television news before expanding into print, social media, and digital platforms. She has travelled extensively across India to cover elections, political developments, and major business events, reporting on issues ranging from politics and governance to business and social affairs. Her key strengths include sharp analysis of national and state politics, as well as international relations. Over the years, she has worked with The Times of India, Google, News24 Digital, MMTV, TV News, and the Ministry of Information & Broadcasting. She currently serves as Assistant News Editor at Organiser, overseeing digital platforms. She is Committed to continuous learning; she maintains high editorial standards and a strong commitment to ethical journalism in a rapidly evolving media landscape. [Read more]
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