Kerala heads into crucial local body polls as three fronts eye 2026 momentum
By IANS | Updated: December 8, 2025 17:30 IST2025-12-08T17:27:08+5:302025-12-08T17:30:09+5:30
Thiruvananthapuram, Dec 8 Kerala votes on Tuesday in the first phase of the local body elections, with districts ...

Kerala heads into crucial local body polls as three fronts eye 2026 momentum
Thiruvananthapuram, Dec 8 Kerala votes on Tuesday in the first phase of the local body elections, with districts up to Thrissur (seven districts) heading to the polls, setting the stage for a politically-significant contest ahead of the 2026 Assembly elections.
The polling for the second phase (remaining seven districts) will be held on Thursday, with counting scheduled for December 13.
For the ruling CPI(M)-led Left Democratic Front (LDF), the Congress-led United Democratic Front (UDF), and the BJP-led National Democratic Alliance (NDA), the verdict will serve as a crucial mid-term political barometer.
The LDF enters the contest burdened by anti-incumbency after nearly a decade in power, amid controversies over governance, financial stress, and multiple political flashpoints.
However, the Left continues to rely on its deep organisational base at the grassroots and its traditional dominance in local self-government institutions.
The CPI(M) views the local polls as critical to arrest any erosion of cadre morale and to reassert its political narrative after setbacks in recent parliamentary and public opinion battles.
For the UDF, the elections represent an opportunity to translate public discontent into electoral gains at the local level.
The Congress is seeking to regain the ground it ceded in the last round of local polls, where the Left had retained a decisive edge.
Internal factionalism remains a challenge, but the Opposition is hoping that anti-government sentiment, rising cost of living, and allegations of administrative failures will tilt urban and semi-urban voters in its favour.
The NDA, meanwhile, is fighting what it considers its most ambitious local poll campaign in Kerala so far.
The BJP has been tasked by Union Home Minister Amit Shah to raise its vote share from 16 per cent to at least 25 per cent, a target that, if achieved, would decisively alter the State’s bipolar political structure.
While the NDA’s organisational strength remains limited outside select urban pockets, it is aggressively targeting young voters, welfare beneficiaries and Ezhava-dominated belts, seeking to widen its base beyond traditional core supporters.
Political observers note that while no dramatic reversal of power equations is expected overnight, even marginal shifts in vote share could signal the beginning of long-term realignments.
A consolidation of UDF gains would energise the Opposition ahead of 2026, while any significant NDA surge would mark a strategic breakthrough for the BJP in a state long resistant to saffron expansion.
With grassroots governance, political credibility and future Assembly ambitions all at stake, the December 13 verdict is expected to redraw Kerala’s political mood board—well before the next big electoral battle begins.
Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor
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