West Bengal’s counting trends continue to remain highly dynamic, with the Bharatiya Janata Party currently trending around the 145-seat mark, slightly below the majority threshold as numbers fluctuate in real time. The All India Trinamool Congress continues to remain a key competitor, with the gap between the two parties shifting as counting progresses. Political narratives around the election have intensified alongside the numbers. BJP leaders and analysts highlight a long-term organisational strategy that, according to them, has been built over more than a decade, focusing on expanding the party’s presence in states like West Bengal. They point to the party’s gradual growth from a marginal presence in earlier elections to a significantly stronger position in recent cycles. The discussion also includes references to senior leadership planning and sustained campaign efforts aimed at increasing vote share and strengthening booth-level organisation. Supporters of the party argue that this growth reflects consistent groundwork, voter outreach, and political consolidation over multiple election cycles. On the other hand, Trinamool Congress leaders maintain that electoral dynamics in West Bengal are shaped by local governance, regional identity, and on-ground political realities. The ongoing counting continues to reflect a closely contested battle between the two major political forces. Analysts caution that these are still evolving early trends, and the final outcome will depend on complete counting of Electronic Voting Machines (EVMs). The current fluctuations between 145 and the majority mark highlight the competitiveness of the election. As counting continues, West Bengal remains the central focus of national political attention, with both parties closely watching constituency-wise developments that could ultimately determine the final mandate.


