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India's fiercest female politician faces a fight for survival
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India's fiercest female politician faces a fight for survival

BBC World · May 5, 2026, 11:27 PM · Also reported by 1 other source

Key takeaways

  • Dimunitive and draped in a plain cotton sari and rubber sandals, Banerjee hardly looked like a politician who would topple one of the world's longest-running elected Communist governments.
  • Yet in 2011 she defeated the Communist Party of India (Marxist) after 34 uninterrupted years in power, overturning a political order that had come to define West Bengal itself.
  • At the time, The New York Times memorably called her "the blunt instrument knocking down their own Berlin Wall".

Why this matters: an international story with cross-border implications worth tracking.

Soutik Biswas India correspondent Nur Photo via Getty Images Banerjee addresses a public meeting in West Bengal in January For 15 years, Mamata Banerjee and her regional Trinamool Congress (TMC) party seemed to embody a political law of India's West Bengal state: they always found a way to survive.

The firebrand populist's defeat to the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) ended her bid for a fourth consecutive term as chief minister - a feat that would have placed her alongside long-serving regional titans such as Jyoti Basu and Naveen Patnaik.

Banerjee's loss brings one of the most remarkable political careers in contemporary India to a moment of profound uncertainty - one that began with street protests and now culminates in the weakening of the political fortress she herself built.

Article preview — originally published by BBC World. Full story at the source.
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