This article examines the NOTA vote share in West Bengal’s 2021 Assembly election, its distribution across constituencies, and the implications for campaign strategy in the 2026 poll, highlighting how even small percentages can influence close contests.
Kolkata
-Ashish Rana
As parties prepare for the 2026 West Bengal Assembly elections, one quiet statistic from 2021 is drawing attention. Beyond the contest between the Trinamool Congress and the BJP, a small but steady share of voters chose NOTA, signalling rejection of all candidates rather than support for any political camp.
In the 2021 West Bengal Assembly elections, 649,916 voters (1.08% of valid votes) selected NOTA, signalling rejection of candidates. These votes hold electoral significance, particularly in closely contested constituencies for the upcoming 2026 polls.
Across the full 294-seat contest in 2021, NOTA accounted for 649,916 votes out of 60,322,834 valid votes. This translated into a statewide NOTA vote share of 1.08 per cent. The percentage may look modest, yet the raw number of more than 6.49 lakh voters carries clear electoral significance.
NOTA vote share and statewide numbers in the 2021 West Bengal Assembly election
Result-day coverage on 2 May 2021 focused on 292 constituencies, because polling in Jangipur and Samserganj was delayed after candidate deaths. Even in those partial figures, NOTA already stood at 1.08 per cent of valid votes. When the two postponed seats were added, the completed statewide picture remained exactly the same.
The core numbers from the 2021 West Bengal Assembly election show how NOTA sat within the wider field. The TMC-led alliance polled around 48.02 per cent of the vote, the BJP-led NDA around 37.98 per cent, and the Sanjukta Morcha, which brought together the Left, Congress and ISF, around 10.04 per cent.
Although NOTA’s 1.08 per cent share was far below these major blocs, it still represented more than a token presence in a large state. The volume of NOTA votes becomes more visible once results are viewed constituency by constituency, particularly in segments where margins between leading candidates stayed tight.
NOTA vote share in close constituencies and its political relevance
The 2021 contest in West Bengal was sharply polarised and stretched across eight phases, with many seats decided narrowly. Several constituencies saw victory margins under 5,000 votes, and a smaller set fell below 1,000. In such places, even a few thousand NOTA votes could equal or exceed the final gap between the top contenders.
Where NOTA totals are higher than the winning margin, they naturally attract interest from campaign planners. These pockets may point to dissatisfaction with candidate choices, local anti-incumbency, internal party tensions or simple voter fatigue. For 2026, such seats are likely to feature heavily in internal reviews by both major alliances.
NOTA vote share versus parties and the 292-seat, 294-seat distinction
On 2 May 2021, when results for 292 seats were first declared, the TMC secured 213 constituencies while the BJP won 77. After polling concluded in Jangipur and Samserganj, the TMC tally rose to 215 in the full 294-member House. Yet across both counts, NOTA’s statewide percentage stayed fixed at 1.08 per cent.
The distinction between the 292-seat outcome and the final 294-seat data matters mostly for technical clarity. Analysts citing result-day figures or full-election summaries are effectively describing the same NOTA trend. In both snapshots, just over 6.49 lakh voters declined to endorse any candidate on their ballot papers.
| Measure | Figure |
|---|---|
| Total NOTA votes | 649,916 |
| Total valid votes | 60,322,834 |
| Statewide NOTA vote share | 1.08% |
| Result-day NOTA share (292 seats) | 1.08% |
| Final NOTA share (294 seats) | 1.08% |
NOTA vote share and what it may signal for the 2026 Assembly polls
The 2021 figures suggest that most West Bengal voters still lined up behind one of the main alliances. Yet a visible segment chose NOTA as a form of protest or disengagement. In a highly polarised state, even a 1 per cent protest vote can shape outcomes in specific seats, if not the overall government.
Parties looking ahead to 2026 are likely to track constituencies where NOTA votes were unusually high or out of step with nearby areas. They may also pay particular attention where NOTA totals were greater than the winning margin, as these locations highlight potential gains if disaffected voters are persuaded to shift towards one side.
Overall, the 2021 NOTA vote did not challenge the TMC’s decisive victory over the BJP at the state level. However, the 649,916 votes cast for NOTA and the constant 1.08 per cent share across both 292-seat and 294-seat counts underline a small but steady group of voters whose choices could prove important in closely contested constituencies during the 2026 West Bengal Assembly election.
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