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West Bengal Elections 2026: What have past exit polls predicted?
ET Online | April 29, 2026 9:57 AM CST

Synopsis

West Bengal Exit Polls: West Bengal's elections have a history of exit poll misses. The 2026 polls are underway, with the Trinamool Congress facing a 15-year incumbency. The BJP is campaigning on industrialization against the TMC's welfare schemes. Voter turnout is high, but voter list revisions have caused tension. The outcome hinges on welfare versus anti-incumbency sentiment.

Women polling officials check Electronic Voting Machines and other materials at a distribution centre ahead of the second phase of elections in West Bengal state, in Kolkata, India, Tuesday, April 28, 2026.
As West Bengal enters the final stretch of the 2026 Assembly elections, the ghost of pollsters past looms large over the state’s political landscape. For a decade, the battle for Bengal has not only been a fight between the Trinamool Congress (TMC) and the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), but a consistent humbling of exit poll predictions that have struggled to grasp the state’s complex electoral undercurrents.




The great mismatch

The 2021 Assembly polls remain the most glaring example of pollster fallacy. Following the 2019 Lok Sabha results—where the BJP surged to 18 seats and a 40 percent vote share—most national agencies predicted a photo finish. Some even projected a saffron wave that would unseat Mamata Banerjee. The reality was a crushing 215-seat landslide for the TMC.

Analysts later admitted they had drastically underestimated the "silent" woman voter and the resilience of the Trinamool’s rural welfare architecture, specifically the impact of the Lakshmir Bhandar scheme.

This followed a pattern seen in 2016, where exit polls failed to predict the scale of the TMC’s second term. While many expected a comfortable win, few anticipated the 211-seat sweep that decimated the Left-Congress alliance.

Even more recently, the 2024 Lok Sabha exit polls predicted a massive BJP lead, with some suggesting up to 30 seats. Once more, the results defied the screens as the TMC held 29 seats, proving that national momentum often hits a ceiling when confronted with Banerjee’s localized messaging.




The 2026 shift

As West Bengal completes its final phase of voting today, April 29, 2026, the variables have shifted significantly. This is the first Assembly election where the TMC faces a 15-year incumbency burden.

The political discourse has been dominated by a clash between welfare and work, with the BJP shifting its strategy away from national rhetoric to promising a "double engine" of industrialization to counter the TMC’s direct-benefit transfers.

The first phase on April 23 saw a staggering 93 percent voter turnout, indicating an energized electorate. However, the campaign has been marred by intense debates over the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of voter lists, which saw the electorate drop by roughly 12 percent.

While the BJP claims this was a necessary "cleaning" of the rolls, the TMC has termed it a "democratic overreach." These tensions, combined with governance shadows and issues ranging from recruitment controversies to regional safety, have provided the opposition with significant ammunition.



How reliable are exit polls?

Exit polls offer a preliminary glimpse into voter preferences, but they are not conclusive. Their reliability hinges on factors such as the size and representativeness of the sample, the methodology used, and regional voting variations.

The official vote count will be conducted on May 4, with final results to be announced the same day by the Election Commission of India. While exit polls typically project seat tallies, vote share trends, and regional patterns, they serve more as indicators of possible outcomes rather than definitive results.


Where to watch West Bengal Exit Polls 2026
Exit poll results will be broadcast across major television networks, news websites and social media platforms. Prominent polling agencies include Axis My India, CVoter, IPSOS, Jan Ki Baat and Today’s Chanakya. Their projections will be available via channels and platforms such as India Today, ABP News, Times Now, Aaj Tak, Republic TV and others.

You can also catch live updates on The Economic Times website.


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