HomeNewsOpinionMamata’s Rally Sets Narrative for 2026: Bengali pride, Hindu roots, no minority appeasement

Mamata’s Rally Sets Narrative for 2026: Bengali pride, Hindu roots, no minority appeasement

TMC’s annual Shahid Diwas rally in Kolkata outlined the party’s overarching approach to 2026 assembly election. Rather than focus on segments of the population, the party will position itself as the defender of regional pride, particularly Bengali language. Implicit is the portrayal of BJP as the outside force, posing a threat to Bengali culture 

July 22, 2025 / 09:02 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
mamata banerjee
Mamata’s strategy blends linguistic pride with economic grievances, countering anti-incumbency by positioning TMC as the defender of Bengali identity against BJP’s alleged anti-Bengali bias.

For the past week, thousands from West Bengal’s villages and districts have thronged Kolkata, their sights set on the historic Shahid Diwas rally on July 21. This annual event, commemorating the 1993 police firing on Youth Congress workers under CPI(M) rule, is a Trinamool Congress (TMC) ritual to honour ‘martyrs’ and rally supporters. On Monday, the sea of TMC faithful gathered with two aims: to see Mamata Banerjee and glean her vision for the 2026 Bengal assembly election.

With anti-incumbency simmering, the TMC faces a tough battle, but Mamata, ever the astute strategist, seized the day to redefine the narrative.

Story continues below Advertisement

The past year has been bruising for TMC. The RG Kar rape-murder case in August 2024 sparked outrage, followed by a cascade of setbacks: the Supreme Court’s April 2025 order axing 25,000 teaching jobs due to TMC’s recruitment fraud, communal violence in Murshidabad, and the South Calcutta Law College controversy. The TMC seemed on the defensive, its image battered. Yet, Mamata turned the tide at Shahid Diwas with a bold, unexpected approach.

Eschewing her usual outreach to Muslims, Mamata pivoted to Bengali subnationalism, emphasizing the protection of the Bengali language and regional pride. She deftly positioned TMC as a defender of Hindu credentials, countering the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) on its own turf. By weaving in the contentious Bangladeshi deportation issue, she tapped into local sentiments, blending cultural identity with political strategy. This narrative shift, unimaginable a month ago, signals Mamata’s intent to fight 2026 not on BJP’s terms but on her own—rooted in Bengal’s pride and resilience. As the election looms, Mamata’s gambit has set the stage for a battle of identities, not just policies. The TMC is back in the game.