Congress leader PJ Kurien NEW DELHI: Veteran Congress leader PJ Kurien on Saturday made it clear that while the Congress has many leaders capable of becoming chief minister, only three names are currently in serious consideration if the UDF comes to power in Kerala. He, however, chose not to disclose who those contenders are.Speaking to a TV channel, Kurien said that unlike the Left Front, the Congress has no shortage of qualified leaders. He added that whoever is chosen as chief minister, the decision will be accepted by everyone in the party, even if they personally disagree.He said he also has his own preference for the post, but would respect the party’s final decision.Kurien added that there is nothing wrong if someone wants or aspires to be chief minister, as it is a democratic system and everyone has the right to express their opinion.”After the results are announced on May 4 and the UDF wins, the high command will intervene, the opinions of the state leadership and MLAs will be sought and a final decision will be taken on who shall be the CM. That will be unanimously accepted by everyone in the party,” he said.He also clarified that none of the senior leaders, including KC Venugopal, Ramesh Chennithala and VD Satheesan, have publicly expressed a desire to become chief minister , and said it is the media that has fuelled such speculation.On exit polls, Kurien said the UDF would win with a much bigger majority than predicted, claiming there is strong anti-incumbency among voters who want a change in government.Several exit polls have indicated a close contest between the ruling LDF and the UDF, pointing towards the possibility of a hung Assembly, though most give a slight edge to the UDF.Kerala went to polls in a single phase on April 9 across all 140 constituencies, with results expected on May 4.About the AuthorTOI News DeskThe TOI News Desk comprises a dedicated and tireless team of journalists who operate around the clock to deliver the most current and comprehensive news and updates to the readers of The Times of India worldwide. With an unwavering commitment to excellence in journalism, our team is at the forefront of gathering, verifying, and presenting breaking news, in-depth analysis, and insightful reports on a wide range of topics. The TOI News Desk is your trusted source for staying informed and connected to the ever-evolving global landscape, ensuring that our readers are equipped with the latest developments that matter most.”Read MoreEnd of ArticleFollow Us On Social MediaVideosHome Minister Amit Shah Meets Sonam Wangchuk & Other Leaders in Leh Ahead Of TalksChhattisgarh IED Blast Kills 4 DRG Personnel During Defusal Operation Near Kanker-Narayanpur BorderIndia-Bound LPG Tanker Sarv Shakti On The Move Across Strait Of Hormuz: Why It Matters?Rae Bareli’s MCF Unveils First Vande Bharat Trainset, Boosting India’s Production CapacityDelhi Police Bust Inter-State Auto Theft Racket Spanning 5 States; 10 Arrested,31 Vehicles RecoveredIndia Tests Disaster Information System, Citizens Get ‘Extremely Severe Alert’ On PhonesIndia May Rethink Conventional Missile Strategy As Global Conflicts Redefine Warfare: Defence SecyPune: 4-Year-Old Girl Allegedly Sexually Assaulted and Murdered by 65 Year-Old-Man in Bhor‘No Further Orders Necessary’: SC Bench Rejects TMC Plea On Counting StaffFormer Diplomats React To Bangladesh Summoning Indian Envoy Over Assam CM Himanta’s Remarks123PhotostoriesWest Bengal elections 2026: Key candidates and their declared assets ahead of resultsStop stretching like this: Common morning routine mistakes hurting your spineWhy curd turns sour faster in summer and how to control fermentation at homeYour feet may be revealing health problems you’re missingPink Guava vs white Guava: Which one is healthier and why it matters5 budget international trips under ₹50,000 from India this summer (with flights)Think you’re healthy? Hidden fatty liver disease is rising without symptomsHow to make Dhaba style Butter Chicken at home’The Devil Wears Prada 2′: Sydney Sweeney to Anna Wintour, stars who were cut from the runway dramaMet Gala 2026: From Karan Johar’s debut to Deepika Padukone’s return – rumoured Indian celebs on the guest list123Hot PicksAssam key constituenciesKerala key constituenciesPuducherry election resultsTamil Nadu constituenciesAjay Pal SharmaBengal Poll RecordHimanta Biswa SarmaTop TrendingUS Germany relationsBank Holiday MayVande Bharat expressLPG cylinder price hikeMumbai missing linkPetrol, Diesel, LPG priceCBSE Class 12th ResultNEET 2026: Exam-day guideBSE AP SSC Class 10th ResultIPL Orange Cap

Congress leader PJ Kurien NEW DELHI: Veteran Congress leader PJ Kurien on Saturday made it clear that while the Congress has many leaders capable of becoming chief minister, only three names are currently in serious consideration if the UDF comes to power in Kerala. He, however, chose not to disclose who those contenders are.Speaking to a TV channel, Kurien said that unlike the Left Front, the Congress has no shortage of qualified leaders. He added that whoever is chosen as chief minister, the decision will be accepted by everyone in the party, even if they personally disagree.He said he also has his own preference for the post, but would respect the party’s final decision.Kurien added that there is nothing wrong if someone wants or aspires to be chief minister, as it is a democratic system and everyone has the right to express their opinion.”After the results are announced on May 4 and the UDF wins, the high command will intervene, the opinions of the state leadership and MLAs will be sought and a final decision will be taken on who shall be the CM. That will be unanimously accepted by everyone in the party,” he said.He also clarified that none of the senior leaders, including KC Venugopal, Ramesh Chennithala and VD Satheesan, have publicly expressed a desire to become chief minister , and said it is the media that has fuelled such speculation.On exit polls, Kurien said the UDF would win with a much bigger majority than predicted, claiming there is strong anti-incumbency among voters who want a change in government.Several exit polls have indicated a close contest between the ruling LDF and the UDF, pointing towards the possibility of a hung Assembly, though most give a slight edge to the UDF.Kerala went to polls in a single phase on April 9 across all 140 constituencies, with results expected on May 4.About the AuthorTOI News DeskThe TOI News Desk comprises a dedicated and tireless team of journalists who operate around the clock to deliver the most current and comprehensive news and updates to the readers of The Times of India worldwide. With an unwavering commitment to excellence in journalism, our team is at the forefront of gathering, verifying, and presenting breaking news, in-depth analysis, and insightful reports on a wide range of topics. The TOI News Desk is your trusted source for staying informed and connected to the ever-evolving global landscape, ensuring that our readers are equipped with the latest developments that matter most.”Read MoreEnd of ArticleFollow Us On Social MediaVideosHome Minister Amit Shah Meets Sonam Wangchuk & Other Leaders in Leh Ahead Of TalksChhattisgarh IED Blast Kills 4 DRG Personnel During Defusal Operation Near Kanker-Narayanpur BorderIndia-Bound LPG Tanker Sarv Shakti On The Move Across Strait Of Hormuz: Why It Matters?Rae Bareli’s MCF Unveils First Vande Bharat Trainset, Boosting India’s Production CapacityDelhi Police Bust Inter-State Auto Theft Racket Spanning 5 States; 10 Arrested,31 Vehicles RecoveredIndia Tests Disaster Information System, Citizens Get ‘Extremely Severe Alert’ On PhonesIndia May Rethink Conventional Missile Strategy As Global Conflicts Redefine Warfare: Defence SecyPune: 4-Year-Old Girl Allegedly Sexually Assaulted and Murdered by 65 Year-Old-Man in Bhor‘No Further Orders Necessary’: SC Bench Rejects TMC Plea On Counting StaffFormer Diplomats React To Bangladesh Summoning Indian Envoy Over Assam CM Himanta’s Remarks123PhotostoriesWest Bengal elections 2026: Key candidates and their declared assets ahead of resultsStop stretching like this: Common morning routine mistakes hurting your spineWhy curd turns sour faster in summer and how to control fermentation at homeYour feet may be revealing health problems you’re missingPink Guava vs white Guava: Which one is healthier and why it matters5 budget international trips under ₹50,000 from India this summer (with flights)Think you’re healthy? Hidden fatty liver disease is rising without symptomsHow to make Dhaba style Butter Chicken at home’The Devil Wears Prada 2′: Sydney Sweeney to Anna Wintour, stars who were cut from the runway dramaMet Gala 2026: From Karan Johar’s debut to Deepika Padukone’s return – rumoured Indian celebs on the guest list123Hot PicksAssam key constituenciesKerala key constituenciesPuducherry election resultsTamil Nadu constituenciesAjay Pal SharmaBengal Poll RecordHimanta Biswa SarmaTop TrendingUS Germany relationsBank Holiday MayVande Bharat expressLPG cylinder price hikeMumbai missing linkPetrol, Diesel, LPG priceCBSE Class 12th ResultNEET 2026: Exam-day guideBSE AP SSC Class 10th ResultIPL Orange Cap

Congress leader PJ Kurien NEW DELHI: Veteran Congress leader PJ Kurien on Saturday made it clear that while the Congress has many leaders capable of becoming chief minister, only three names are currently in serious consideration if the UDF comes to power in Kerala. He, however, chose not to disclose who those contenders are.Speaking to…

Read More
May 02, 2026, 21:55 IST

May 02, 2026, 21:55 IST

India’s Harleen Deol (PTI Photo/Kunal Patil) NEW DELHI: India-A have announced separate squads for their upcoming tour of England, with Anushka Sharma set to lead the T20 side and Harleen Deol captaining the ODI team. The tour will feature three T20Is starting June 20, followed by three one-day matches from July 1.Anushka Sharma, who recently…

Read More
R Madhavan on growing older, warns about post-retirement life after 60: ‘Being dependent physically or financially is worse than hell’

R Madhavan on growing older, warns about post-retirement life after 60: ‘Being dependent physically or financially is worse than hell’

R Madhavan has opened up about ageing, life planning and the challenges of staying relevant in a rapidly changing world. Speaking about his current work and personal reflections, the actor emphasised that while people are living longer today, very few are truly prepared for what comes after retirement.In an insightful conversation with Varun Dua, Madhavan…

Read More
Boost for Navy’s defence: India successfully tests long-range hypersonic anti-ship missile off Odisha

Boost for Navy’s defence: India successfully tests long-range hypersonic anti-ship missile off Odisha

NEW DELHI: India has successfully test-fired a long-range hypersonic anti-ship missile (LR-AShM) off the Odisha coast. The missile, developed by DRDO, accurately struck a designated target at a range of 1,500 km, marking a major milestone in extending the country’s defensive reach at sea.The missile is designed to hit targets at speeds exceeding Mach 5…

Read More
Chirayu Rana used legal chatbot for advice before alleging sexual harassment against JPMorgan executive Lorna Hajdini: ‘Do I have a valid claim?’

Chirayu Rana used legal chatbot for advice before alleging sexual harassment against JPMorgan executive Lorna Hajdini: ‘Do I have a valid claim?’

A former JPMorgan staffer who has accused a senior executive of sexual harrassment had taken advice from an online legal chatbot while describing similar allegations, according to reporting from The New York Post.Indian-origin Chirayu Rana, whose now-withdrawn lawsuit alleged that executive director Lorna Hajdini forced him into degrading sexual acts, is said to have used…

Read More
Prasoon Joshi appointed Chairman of Prasar Bharati. The celebrated lyricist and writer will now lead India’s public broadcasting system, including Doordarshan and All India Radio. NEW DELHI: The Centre on Saturday appointed noted lyricist and communications expert Prasoon Joshi as chairman of Prasar Bharati, filling a key vacancy at the public broadcaster that has been without a full-time head since December.Joshi, who is currently chairperson of the Central Board of Film Certification, brings with him decades of experience across advertising, cinema, literature and public communication. His appointment comes at a time when the national broadcaster is navigating a rapid shift towards digital platforms and evolving audience preferences.Union information and broadcasting minister Ashwini Vaishnaw described Joshi as a “rare creative spirit”, expressing confidence that his leadership would infuse “renewed energy, deeper purpose and a fresh creative voice” into the organisation.The post had been vacant since the resignation of former IAS officer Navneet Kumar Sehgal in December last year.An award-winning lyricist and advertising professional, Joshi has led major global campaigns and previously served as CEO of McCann World Group India and chairman for Asia Pacific. His tenure at the film certification body since 2017 has been marked by what officials described as a “balanced approach” between creative expression and regulatory oversight.Set up under the Prasar Bharati Act, 1990, the autonomous broadcaster oversees All India Radio and Doordarshan, which together form one of the country’s largest media networks with extensive reach across television, radio and digital platforms.Officials said Joshi’s experience in storytelling and mass communication is expected to help reposition public broadcasting in an increasingly competitive and technology-driven media landscape, with a sharper focus on content innovation and audience engagement.About the AuthorManash Pratim GohainManash Pratim Gohain is a seasoned journalist with over two decades at The Times of India, where he has built a rich body of work spanning education policy, politics, and governance. Renowned for his incisive coverage of the National Education Policy (NEP) 2020, accreditation reforms, and skilling initiatives, he has also reported on student politics, urban policy, and social movements. His political reportage—both reflective and news-driven—adds depth to his writing, bridging policy with public impact. Through his 2,500 articles and related outlets, he has emerged as a trusted voice in national discourse, particularly in linking education reform to broader societal change.Read MoreEnd of ArticleFollow Us On Social MediaVideosIndia-Bound LPG Tanker Sarv Shakti On The Move Across Strait Of Hormuz: Why It Matters?Rae Bareli’s MCF Unveils First Vande Bharat Trainset, Boosting India’s Production CapacityDelhi Police Bust Inter-State Auto Theft Racket Spanning 5 States; 10 Arrested,31 Vehicles RecoveredIndia Tests Disaster Information System, Citizens Get ‘Extremely Severe Alert’ On PhonesIndia May Rethink Conventional Missile Strategy As Global Conflicts Redefine Warfare: Defence SecyPune: 4-Year-Old Girl Allegedly Sexually Assaulted and Murdered by 65 Year-Old-Man in Bhor‘No Further Orders Necessary’: SC Bench Rejects TMC Plea On Counting StaffFormer Diplomats React To Bangladesh Summoning Indian Envoy Over Assam CM Himanta’s Remarks‘Stop Poking Nose In India’s Internal Affairs’: JKSA Slams Pakistan Over Jamia Protest RemarksDelhi, Dhaka Move To Resume Full-Scale Visa Services Amid Ties Reset123PhotostoriesYour feet may be revealing health problems you’re missingPink Guava vs white Guava: Which one is healthier and why it matters5 budget international trips under ₹50,000 from India this summer (with flights)Think you’re healthy? Hidden fatty liver disease is rising without symptomsHow to make Dhaba style Butter Chicken at home’The Devil Wears Prada 2′: Sydney Sweeney to Anna Wintour, stars who were cut from the runway dramaMet Gala 2026: From Karan Johar’s debut to Deepika Padukone’s return – rumoured Indian celebs on the guest listDog breeds that have been a part of the British Royal FamilyArchana Puran Singh to buy a new bungalow worth approximately Rs 50 crore in Madh Island; says, ‘Not sure if we can afford it but…’Blake Lively and Justin Baldoni head to court: Here’s all we know about the case ahead of the trial123Hot PicksAssam key constituenciesKerala key constituenciesPuducherry election resultsTamil Nadu constituenciesAjay Pal SharmaBengal Poll RecordHimanta Biswa SarmaTop TrendingUS Germany relationsBank Holiday MayVande Bharat expressLPG cylinder price hikeMumbai missing linkPetrol, Diesel, LPG priceCBSE Class 12th ResultNEET 2026: Exam-day guideBSE AP SSC Class 10th ResultIPL Orange Cap

Prasoon Joshi appointed Chairman of Prasar Bharati. The celebrated lyricist and writer will now lead India’s public broadcasting system, including Doordarshan and All India Radio. NEW DELHI: The Centre on Saturday appointed noted lyricist and communications expert Prasoon Joshi as chairman of Prasar Bharati, filling a key vacancy at the public broadcaster that has been without a full-time head since December.Joshi, who is currently chairperson of the Central Board of Film Certification, brings with him decades of experience across advertising, cinema, literature and public communication. His appointment comes at a time when the national broadcaster is navigating a rapid shift towards digital platforms and evolving audience preferences.Union information and broadcasting minister Ashwini Vaishnaw described Joshi as a “rare creative spirit”, expressing confidence that his leadership would infuse “renewed energy, deeper purpose and a fresh creative voice” into the organisation.The post had been vacant since the resignation of former IAS officer Navneet Kumar Sehgal in December last year.An award-winning lyricist and advertising professional, Joshi has led major global campaigns and previously served as CEO of McCann World Group India and chairman for Asia Pacific. His tenure at the film certification body since 2017 has been marked by what officials described as a “balanced approach” between creative expression and regulatory oversight.Set up under the Prasar Bharati Act, 1990, the autonomous broadcaster oversees All India Radio and Doordarshan, which together form one of the country’s largest media networks with extensive reach across television, radio and digital platforms.Officials said Joshi’s experience in storytelling and mass communication is expected to help reposition public broadcasting in an increasingly competitive and technology-driven media landscape, with a sharper focus on content innovation and audience engagement.About the AuthorManash Pratim GohainManash Pratim Gohain is a seasoned journalist with over two decades at The Times of India, where he has built a rich body of work spanning education policy, politics, and governance. Renowned for his incisive coverage of the National Education Policy (NEP) 2020, accreditation reforms, and skilling initiatives, he has also reported on student politics, urban policy, and social movements. His political reportage—both reflective and news-driven—adds depth to his writing, bridging policy with public impact. Through his 2,500 articles and related outlets, he has emerged as a trusted voice in national discourse, particularly in linking education reform to broader societal change.Read MoreEnd of ArticleFollow Us On Social MediaVideosIndia-Bound LPG Tanker Sarv Shakti On The Move Across Strait Of Hormuz: Why It Matters?Rae Bareli’s MCF Unveils First Vande Bharat Trainset, Boosting India’s Production CapacityDelhi Police Bust Inter-State Auto Theft Racket Spanning 5 States; 10 Arrested,31 Vehicles RecoveredIndia Tests Disaster Information System, Citizens Get ‘Extremely Severe Alert’ On PhonesIndia May Rethink Conventional Missile Strategy As Global Conflicts Redefine Warfare: Defence SecyPune: 4-Year-Old Girl Allegedly Sexually Assaulted and Murdered by 65 Year-Old-Man in Bhor‘No Further Orders Necessary’: SC Bench Rejects TMC Plea On Counting StaffFormer Diplomats React To Bangladesh Summoning Indian Envoy Over Assam CM Himanta’s Remarks‘Stop Poking Nose In India’s Internal Affairs’: JKSA Slams Pakistan Over Jamia Protest RemarksDelhi, Dhaka Move To Resume Full-Scale Visa Services Amid Ties Reset123PhotostoriesYour feet may be revealing health problems you’re missingPink Guava vs white Guava: Which one is healthier and why it matters5 budget international trips under ₹50,000 from India this summer (with flights)Think you’re healthy? Hidden fatty liver disease is rising without symptomsHow to make Dhaba style Butter Chicken at home’The Devil Wears Prada 2′: Sydney Sweeney to Anna Wintour, stars who were cut from the runway dramaMet Gala 2026: From Karan Johar’s debut to Deepika Padukone’s return – rumoured Indian celebs on the guest listDog breeds that have been a part of the British Royal FamilyArchana Puran Singh to buy a new bungalow worth approximately Rs 50 crore in Madh Island; says, ‘Not sure if we can afford it but…’Blake Lively and Justin Baldoni head to court: Here’s all we know about the case ahead of the trial123Hot PicksAssam key constituenciesKerala key constituenciesPuducherry election resultsTamil Nadu constituenciesAjay Pal SharmaBengal Poll RecordHimanta Biswa SarmaTop TrendingUS Germany relationsBank Holiday MayVande Bharat expressLPG cylinder price hikeMumbai missing linkPetrol, Diesel, LPG priceCBSE Class 12th ResultNEET 2026: Exam-day guideBSE AP SSC Class 10th ResultIPL Orange Cap

Prasoon Joshi appointed Chairman of Prasar Bharati. The celebrated lyricist and writer will now lead India’s public broadcasting system, including Doordarshan and All India Radio. NEW DELHI: The Centre on Saturday appointed noted lyricist and communications expert Prasoon Joshi as chairman of Prasar Bharati, filling a key vacancy at the public broadcaster that has been…

Read More
Tom Brady pulled into Mike Vrabel and Dianna Russini scandal as explosive Titans report resurfaces

Tom Brady pulled into Mike Vrabel and Dianna Russini scandal as explosive Titans report resurfaces

Tom Brady has been drawn into the ongoing Mike Vrabel and Dianna Russini controversy after a 2020 report resurfaced. The report claimed the Tennessee Titans were not interested in signing Brady, instead backing Ryan Tannehill. Now, amid renewed scrutiny, questions are emerging about whether that narrative reflected reality or served a strategic purpose at the…

Read More
Suvendu Adhikari; Mamata Banerjee Bengal breathes politics. Take a walk through the streets of Howrah, Kolkata or any town in the state and you will find tea stalls where kakus (uncles) argue over ideology, leaders and the future, as if each conversation carries the weight of history. This is not new. From the era of Jyoti Basu, whose long tenure came to define stability and cadre-driven governance, to the upheaval led by Mamata Banerjee in 2011, Bengal has repeatedly shown that when it turns, it turns decisively. Politics here is not distant or abstract. It is woven into everyday life, shaped as much in neighbourhood debates as in party offices.The 2026 assembly election unfolds within that deeply political culture, but with a new layer of uncertainty. Over two phases on April 23 and 29, more than 6.8 crore voters participated to elect their representatives to the 294 member state assembly. Yet this election is not only about turnout or party strength. The Special Intensive Revision of electoral rolls, which significantly reduced the electorate, has made the very act of voting a point of contention.At the centre of the contest lies a sharper bipolarity than before. The Trinamool Congress faces its most direct challenge yet from the Bharatiya Janata Party, turning the election into a contest not just of numbers, but of organisation, cadre strength, identity politics and welfare delivery. Counting day on May 4 will deliver a result (most likely). Whether it signals continuity or another decisive shift is the question that lingers.Here are 10 things you need to know about the Bengal assembly polls 2026: A historic turnoutThe defining statistic of the 2026 election is turnout. Phase 1, covering 152 constituencies, recorded close to 93 per cent participation. Phase 2, across 142 constituencies, approached 90 per cent by late evening, already surpassing previous benchmarks. At first glance, these numbers suggest an unprecedented surge in voter enthusiasm. The reality is more complex. The Special Intensive Revision reduced the total electorate from around 7.66 crore to approximately 6.82 crore. A smaller voter base inevitably inflates turnout percentages. Yet this is not only a statistical effect. In Phase 1 constituencies, the absolute number of votes cast rose by roughly 2 lakh compared to 2021. In districts such as Murshidabad, some booths reported turnout exceeding 96 per cent. SIR-ious ControversyNo issue shaped the 2026 election more than the Special Intensive Revision of electoral rolls. Approximately 90 lakh names, close to 12 per cent of the electorate, were removed prior to polling. Of these, over 60 lakh were categorised as absentee or deceased, while around 27 lakh cases remained under adjudication.The Election Commission has maintained that the exercise was necessary to remove duplicate, deceased and “absent” voters. But the flashpoint has been the category of “logical discrepancy”, under which lakhs were flagged over issues as minor as spelling errors or mismatched records. For many, the line between correction and exclusion has appeared blurred. Chief minister Mamata Banerjee has been unequivocal, calling the process “arbitrary” and accusing the BJP of attempting to disenfranchise sections of voters. The BJP, in turn, has defended SIR as a long overdue clean-up, arguing that credible elections require accurate rolls.On the ground, the consequences were immediate. In districts such as Murshidabad and Malda, reports of missing names have fuelled anger and anxiety, even as many voters returned home specifically to ensure their presence on the rolls.What the exit polls predictExit polls in West Bengal have long struggled with accuracy. In 2021, several agencies predicted a close contest, with some projecting a BJP advantage. The final result was a decisive Trinamool victory, 215 seats to 77.For 2026, projections remain divided. Some polls suggest the BJP could cross the majority mark, while others indicate a narrow Trinamool edge or even a hung assembly. The spread itself reflects uncertainty. Bengal’s hyper-local political networks, allegations of intimidation, and the complexity introduced by issues such as the SIR make standardised sampling difficult — and it is always with the exit polls, the can (and have very often) can turned out to be wrong on the result day.Strongholds and swing zonesBengal’s electoral map remains regionally distinct. North Bengal, including Jalpaiguri and Cooch Behar, has leaned towards the BJP since 2019. In the 2021 assembly election, the party won a majority of seats in this belt, establishing its strongest foothold in the state.South Bengal, particularly the Presidency division covering Kolkata and surrounding districts, remains the Trinamool Congress’s core base. In 2021, the party dominated this region, and Phase 2 of the 2026 election covered many of these constituencies. For TMC, retaining South Bengal is essential to holding power. For the BJP, gains here are necessary to convert its northern strength into a statewide majority. The Matua-dominated areas of North 24 Parganas have emerged as a key battleground, with citizenship promises forming a central campaign plank.Battle of BhowaniporeFew seats carry the symbolic importance of Bhabanipur. It is Mamata Banerjee’s constituency and a focal point of political narrative. After losing Nandigram in 2021, she returned to the assembly through a by-election here. In 2026, the BJP fielded Suvendu Adhikari against her once again, turning the contest into a high-profile rematch. Both sides framed the battle as emblematic of the larger election.Also read: Like Nandigram last time, has BJP set another trap for Mamata in Bhowanipore?Allegations over voter deletions added to the intensity. The Trinamool claimed disproportionate impact on minority voters, while the BJP rejected the charge. Beyond numbers, the outcome in Bhabanipur carries symbolic weight. A Banerjee victory would reinforce her personal authority.A second defeat to BJP’s Suvendu Adhikari, once her close aide, would be a major blow to her prestige, with far-reaching consequences at both the state and national levels.The candidatesData from the Association for Democratic Reforms highlights a continuing pattern in Indian elections. Around 23 per cent of candidates in 2026 declared criminal cases, with roughly one in five facing serious charges. Dozens reported cases related to violent offences, including murder, while others faced allegations involving crimes against women. The distribution cuts across parties.Women votersWest Bengal’s electorate is close to gender parity, with roughly 3.44 crore women voters. Turnout among women has historically matched or even exceeded that of men, making them a decisive constituency. The Trinamool Congress has invested heavily in welfare schemes targeting women, particularly direct cash transfers such as Lakshmir Bhandar. These programmes played a key role in the 2021 victory and remain central to its campaign. Welfare politicsSince 2011, the Trinamool government has built an extensive welfare framework. Schemes covering income support, healthcare, and education have created a direct link between the state and households. This model has reshaped electoral competition. The party’s campaign rests not only on identity or ideology, but on tangible benefits delivered at scale.The BJP has attempted to counter this by promising higher payouts and faster implementation of citizenship provisions. At the same time, it has focused on issues such as corruption, governance, and law and order.The contest is therefore not between welfare and its absence, but between competing claims over delivery, credibility, and intent.The Left and Congress: From dominance to declineThe scale of the Left Front’s decline remains striking. From uninterrupted rule between 1977 and 2011, it has moved to complete absence in the 2021 assembly. Its earlier success was built on land reforms and a strong cadre network. Over time, that structure became rigid, and controversies such as Singur and Nandigram eroded its support.Also read: From red to green to saffron? BJP eyes power shift in Bengal as Mamata defends her turfThe Congress, once dominant in the decades after Independence, has followed a similar trajectory. In 2026, it remains present in terms of candidates but lacks a realistic path to power.A significant portion of the Left’s former vote base has shifted to the BJP, reshaping Bengal’s political alignment and turning the contest into a largely bipolar one.Shift or cycle?The central question of the 2026 election is whether West Bengal is undergoing a structural political shift or experiencing a cyclical phase of anti-incumbency.The state’s history suggests that when change occurs, it tends to be decisive. The transitions from Congress to Left, and from Left to Trinamool, were not gradual adjustments but sweeping realignments. The BJP argues that 2026 represents a similar moment. The counterargument is rooted in identity and political culture. Mamata Banerjee’s positioning as a defender of Bengali identity and voting rights continues to resonate with many voters.At the same time, the BJP’s expansion over the past decade is undeniable. From marginal presence to principal challenger, its rise has altered the competitive landscape.What is clear is that Bengal has repeatedly replaced dominant political formations when conditions align. Whether the Trinamool becomes the fourth such case, or retains its position, will be decided by the results.What to expectIn the end, West Bengal’s 2026 election will be reduced to a single number, the final seat tally on May 4. Yet the days after Phase 2 have already shown that in Bengal, the story rarely pauses when voting ends. As Mamata said during the 2021 assembly polls when her party swept the BJP, ‘khela hobe’. And the ‘khela’ continues on the streets of Bengal even after the second phase polling closed. Mamata herself visited a strongroom in Kolkata, with the TMC alleging irregularities in the handling of ballot units, claims firmly rejected by the BJP and the Election Commission.The images that followed, party workers camping outside counting centres, tightened security, sporadic clashes, have reinforced a familiar truth. In Bengal, elections unfold beyond polling day, in narratives, in suspicion, and in the charged hours before counting.And yet, beneath the noise, one constant stands out. Participation. In an election shaped by uncertainty over voter rolls and intense political messaging, crorse still chose to vote. This will ultimately be the only thing that matters. Whether it delivers continuity or another decisive shift will soon be clear.About the AuthorTOI News DeskThe TOI News Desk comprises a dedicated and tireless team of journalists who operate around the clock to deliver the most current and comprehensive news and updates to the readers of The Times of India worldwide. With an unwavering commitment to excellence in journalism, our team is at the forefront of gathering, verifying, and presenting breaking news, in-depth analysis, and insightful reports on a wide range of topics. The TOI News Desk is your trusted source for staying informed and connected to the ever-evolving global landscape, ensuring that our readers are equipped with the latest developments that matter most.”Read MoreEnd of ArticleFollow Us On Social MediaVideosChhattisgarh IED Blast Kills 4 DRG Personnel During Defusal Operation Near Kanker-Narayanpur BorderIndia-Bound LPG Tanker Sarv Shakti On The Move Across Strait Of Hormuz: Why It Matters?Rae Bareli’s MCF Unveils First Vande Bharat Trainset, Boosting India’s Production CapacityDelhi Police Bust Inter-State Auto Theft Racket Spanning 5 States; 10 Arrested,31 Vehicles RecoveredIndia Tests Disaster Information System, Citizens Get ‘Extremely Severe Alert’ On PhonesIndia May Rethink Conventional Missile Strategy As Global Conflicts Redefine Warfare: Defence SecyPune: 4-Year-Old Girl Allegedly Sexually Assaulted and Murdered by 65 Year-Old-Man in Bhor‘No Further Orders Necessary’: SC Bench Rejects TMC Plea On Counting StaffFormer Diplomats React To Bangladesh Summoning Indian Envoy Over Assam CM Himanta’s Remarks‘Stop Poking Nose In India’s Internal Affairs’: JKSA Slams Pakistan Over Jamia Protest Remarks123PhotostoriesWhy curd turns sour faster in summer and how to control fermentation at homeYour feet may be revealing health problems you’re missingPink Guava vs white Guava: Which one is healthier and why it matters5 budget international trips under ₹50,000 from India this summer (with flights)Think you’re healthy? Hidden fatty liver disease is rising without symptomsHow to make Dhaba style Butter Chicken at home’The Devil Wears Prada 2′: Sydney Sweeney to Anna Wintour, stars who were cut from the runway dramaMet Gala 2026: From Karan Johar’s debut to Deepika Padukone’s return – rumoured Indian celebs on the guest listThings you’ll only realise about your partner when you WFH togetherDog breeds that have been a part of the British Royal Family123Hot PicksAssam key constituenciesKerala key constituenciesPuducherry election resultsTamil Nadu constituenciesAjay Pal SharmaBengal Poll RecordHimanta Biswa SarmaTop TrendingUS Germany relationsBank Holiday MayVande Bharat expressLPG cylinder price hikeMumbai missing linkPetrol, Diesel, LPG priceCBSE Class 12th ResultNEET 2026: Exam-day guideBSE AP SSC Class 10th ResultIPL Orange Cap

Suvendu Adhikari; Mamata Banerjee Bengal breathes politics. Take a walk through the streets of Howrah, Kolkata or any town in the state and you will find tea stalls where kakus (uncles) argue over ideology, leaders and the future, as if each conversation carries the weight of history. This is not new. From the era of Jyoti Basu, whose long tenure came to define stability and cadre-driven governance, to the upheaval led by Mamata Banerjee in 2011, Bengal has repeatedly shown that when it turns, it turns decisively. Politics here is not distant or abstract. It is woven into everyday life, shaped as much in neighbourhood debates as in party offices.The 2026 assembly election unfolds within that deeply political culture, but with a new layer of uncertainty. Over two phases on April 23 and 29, more than 6.8 crore voters participated to elect their representatives to the 294 member state assembly. Yet this election is not only about turnout or party strength. The Special Intensive Revision of electoral rolls, which significantly reduced the electorate, has made the very act of voting a point of contention.At the centre of the contest lies a sharper bipolarity than before. The Trinamool Congress faces its most direct challenge yet from the Bharatiya Janata Party, turning the election into a contest not just of numbers, but of organisation, cadre strength, identity politics and welfare delivery. Counting day on May 4 will deliver a result (most likely). Whether it signals continuity or another decisive shift is the question that lingers.Here are 10 things you need to know about the Bengal assembly polls 2026: A historic turnoutThe defining statistic of the 2026 election is turnout. Phase 1, covering 152 constituencies, recorded close to 93 per cent participation. Phase 2, across 142 constituencies, approached 90 per cent by late evening, already surpassing previous benchmarks. At first glance, these numbers suggest an unprecedented surge in voter enthusiasm. The reality is more complex. The Special Intensive Revision reduced the total electorate from around 7.66 crore to approximately 6.82 crore. A smaller voter base inevitably inflates turnout percentages. Yet this is not only a statistical effect. In Phase 1 constituencies, the absolute number of votes cast rose by roughly 2 lakh compared to 2021. In districts such as Murshidabad, some booths reported turnout exceeding 96 per cent. SIR-ious ControversyNo issue shaped the 2026 election more than the Special Intensive Revision of electoral rolls. Approximately 90 lakh names, close to 12 per cent of the electorate, were removed prior to polling. Of these, over 60 lakh were categorised as absentee or deceased, while around 27 lakh cases remained under adjudication.The Election Commission has maintained that the exercise was necessary to remove duplicate, deceased and “absent” voters. But the flashpoint has been the category of “logical discrepancy”, under which lakhs were flagged over issues as minor as spelling errors or mismatched records. For many, the line between correction and exclusion has appeared blurred. Chief minister Mamata Banerjee has been unequivocal, calling the process “arbitrary” and accusing the BJP of attempting to disenfranchise sections of voters. The BJP, in turn, has defended SIR as a long overdue clean-up, arguing that credible elections require accurate rolls.On the ground, the consequences were immediate. In districts such as Murshidabad and Malda, reports of missing names have fuelled anger and anxiety, even as many voters returned home specifically to ensure their presence on the rolls.What the exit polls predictExit polls in West Bengal have long struggled with accuracy. In 2021, several agencies predicted a close contest, with some projecting a BJP advantage. The final result was a decisive Trinamool victory, 215 seats to 77.For 2026, projections remain divided. Some polls suggest the BJP could cross the majority mark, while others indicate a narrow Trinamool edge or even a hung assembly. The spread itself reflects uncertainty. Bengal’s hyper-local political networks, allegations of intimidation, and the complexity introduced by issues such as the SIR make standardised sampling difficult — and it is always with the exit polls, the can (and have very often) can turned out to be wrong on the result day.Strongholds and swing zonesBengal’s electoral map remains regionally distinct. North Bengal, including Jalpaiguri and Cooch Behar, has leaned towards the BJP since 2019. In the 2021 assembly election, the party won a majority of seats in this belt, establishing its strongest foothold in the state.South Bengal, particularly the Presidency division covering Kolkata and surrounding districts, remains the Trinamool Congress’s core base. In 2021, the party dominated this region, and Phase 2 of the 2026 election covered many of these constituencies. For TMC, retaining South Bengal is essential to holding power. For the BJP, gains here are necessary to convert its northern strength into a statewide majority. The Matua-dominated areas of North 24 Parganas have emerged as a key battleground, with citizenship promises forming a central campaign plank.Battle of BhowaniporeFew seats carry the symbolic importance of Bhabanipur. It is Mamata Banerjee’s constituency and a focal point of political narrative. After losing Nandigram in 2021, she returned to the assembly through a by-election here. In 2026, the BJP fielded Suvendu Adhikari against her once again, turning the contest into a high-profile rematch. Both sides framed the battle as emblematic of the larger election.Also read: Like Nandigram last time, has BJP set another trap for Mamata in Bhowanipore?Allegations over voter deletions added to the intensity. The Trinamool claimed disproportionate impact on minority voters, while the BJP rejected the charge. Beyond numbers, the outcome in Bhabanipur carries symbolic weight. A Banerjee victory would reinforce her personal authority.A second defeat to BJP’s Suvendu Adhikari, once her close aide, would be a major blow to her prestige, with far-reaching consequences at both the state and national levels.The candidatesData from the Association for Democratic Reforms highlights a continuing pattern in Indian elections. Around 23 per cent of candidates in 2026 declared criminal cases, with roughly one in five facing serious charges. Dozens reported cases related to violent offences, including murder, while others faced allegations involving crimes against women. The distribution cuts across parties.Women votersWest Bengal’s electorate is close to gender parity, with roughly 3.44 crore women voters. Turnout among women has historically matched or even exceeded that of men, making them a decisive constituency. The Trinamool Congress has invested heavily in welfare schemes targeting women, particularly direct cash transfers such as Lakshmir Bhandar. These programmes played a key role in the 2021 victory and remain central to its campaign. Welfare politicsSince 2011, the Trinamool government has built an extensive welfare framework. Schemes covering income support, healthcare, and education have created a direct link between the state and households. This model has reshaped electoral competition. The party’s campaign rests not only on identity or ideology, but on tangible benefits delivered at scale.The BJP has attempted to counter this by promising higher payouts and faster implementation of citizenship provisions. At the same time, it has focused on issues such as corruption, governance, and law and order.The contest is therefore not between welfare and its absence, but between competing claims over delivery, credibility, and intent.The Left and Congress: From dominance to declineThe scale of the Left Front’s decline remains striking. From uninterrupted rule between 1977 and 2011, it has moved to complete absence in the 2021 assembly. Its earlier success was built on land reforms and a strong cadre network. Over time, that structure became rigid, and controversies such as Singur and Nandigram eroded its support.Also read: From red to green to saffron? BJP eyes power shift in Bengal as Mamata defends her turfThe Congress, once dominant in the decades after Independence, has followed a similar trajectory. In 2026, it remains present in terms of candidates but lacks a realistic path to power.A significant portion of the Left’s former vote base has shifted to the BJP, reshaping Bengal’s political alignment and turning the contest into a largely bipolar one.Shift or cycle?The central question of the 2026 election is whether West Bengal is undergoing a structural political shift or experiencing a cyclical phase of anti-incumbency.The state’s history suggests that when change occurs, it tends to be decisive. The transitions from Congress to Left, and from Left to Trinamool, were not gradual adjustments but sweeping realignments. The BJP argues that 2026 represents a similar moment. The counterargument is rooted in identity and political culture. Mamata Banerjee’s positioning as a defender of Bengali identity and voting rights continues to resonate with many voters.At the same time, the BJP’s expansion over the past decade is undeniable. From marginal presence to principal challenger, its rise has altered the competitive landscape.What is clear is that Bengal has repeatedly replaced dominant political formations when conditions align. Whether the Trinamool becomes the fourth such case, or retains its position, will be decided by the results.What to expectIn the end, West Bengal’s 2026 election will be reduced to a single number, the final seat tally on May 4. Yet the days after Phase 2 have already shown that in Bengal, the story rarely pauses when voting ends. As Mamata said during the 2021 assembly polls when her party swept the BJP, ‘khela hobe’. And the ‘khela’ continues on the streets of Bengal even after the second phase polling closed. Mamata herself visited a strongroom in Kolkata, with the TMC alleging irregularities in the handling of ballot units, claims firmly rejected by the BJP and the Election Commission.The images that followed, party workers camping outside counting centres, tightened security, sporadic clashes, have reinforced a familiar truth. In Bengal, elections unfold beyond polling day, in narratives, in suspicion, and in the charged hours before counting.And yet, beneath the noise, one constant stands out. Participation. In an election shaped by uncertainty over voter rolls and intense political messaging, crorse still chose to vote. This will ultimately be the only thing that matters. Whether it delivers continuity or another decisive shift will soon be clear.About the AuthorTOI News DeskThe TOI News Desk comprises a dedicated and tireless team of journalists who operate around the clock to deliver the most current and comprehensive news and updates to the readers of The Times of India worldwide. With an unwavering commitment to excellence in journalism, our team is at the forefront of gathering, verifying, and presenting breaking news, in-depth analysis, and insightful reports on a wide range of topics. The TOI News Desk is your trusted source for staying informed and connected to the ever-evolving global landscape, ensuring that our readers are equipped with the latest developments that matter most.”Read MoreEnd of ArticleFollow Us On Social MediaVideosChhattisgarh IED Blast Kills 4 DRG Personnel During Defusal Operation Near Kanker-Narayanpur BorderIndia-Bound LPG Tanker Sarv Shakti On The Move Across Strait Of Hormuz: Why It Matters?Rae Bareli’s MCF Unveils First Vande Bharat Trainset, Boosting India’s Production CapacityDelhi Police Bust Inter-State Auto Theft Racket Spanning 5 States; 10 Arrested,31 Vehicles RecoveredIndia Tests Disaster Information System, Citizens Get ‘Extremely Severe Alert’ On PhonesIndia May Rethink Conventional Missile Strategy As Global Conflicts Redefine Warfare: Defence SecyPune: 4-Year-Old Girl Allegedly Sexually Assaulted and Murdered by 65 Year-Old-Man in Bhor‘No Further Orders Necessary’: SC Bench Rejects TMC Plea On Counting StaffFormer Diplomats React To Bangladesh Summoning Indian Envoy Over Assam CM Himanta’s Remarks‘Stop Poking Nose In India’s Internal Affairs’: JKSA Slams Pakistan Over Jamia Protest Remarks123PhotostoriesWhy curd turns sour faster in summer and how to control fermentation at homeYour feet may be revealing health problems you’re missingPink Guava vs white Guava: Which one is healthier and why it matters5 budget international trips under ₹50,000 from India this summer (with flights)Think you’re healthy? Hidden fatty liver disease is rising without symptomsHow to make Dhaba style Butter Chicken at home’The Devil Wears Prada 2′: Sydney Sweeney to Anna Wintour, stars who were cut from the runway dramaMet Gala 2026: From Karan Johar’s debut to Deepika Padukone’s return – rumoured Indian celebs on the guest listThings you’ll only realise about your partner when you WFH togetherDog breeds that have been a part of the British Royal Family123Hot PicksAssam key constituenciesKerala key constituenciesPuducherry election resultsTamil Nadu constituenciesAjay Pal SharmaBengal Poll RecordHimanta Biswa SarmaTop TrendingUS Germany relationsBank Holiday MayVande Bharat expressLPG cylinder price hikeMumbai missing linkPetrol, Diesel, LPG priceCBSE Class 12th ResultNEET 2026: Exam-day guideBSE AP SSC Class 10th ResultIPL Orange Cap

Suvendu Adhikari; Mamata Banerjee Bengal breathes politics. Take a walk through the streets of Howrah, Kolkata or any town in the state and you will find tea stalls where kakus (uncles) argue over ideology, leaders and the future, as if each conversation carries the weight of history. This is not new. From the era of…

Read More
When Tamannaah Bhatia talked about unconditional love: ‘Love is not a transaction… it can happen as many times as you decide’

When Tamannaah Bhatia talked about unconditional love: ‘Love is not a transaction… it can happen as many times as you decide’

Following her reported breakup with Vijay Varma in early 2025, Tamannaah Bhatia shared a mature perspective on love, defining it as unconditional, “one-sided,” and an “inside job” rather than a transactional relationship. She expressed a desire to become a better life partner and to find joy in companionship, stating she is working on herself.In a…

Read More
Aquarius, Weekly Horoscope, May 03 to May 09, 2026: Week brings relief and improved work conditions

Aquarius, Weekly Horoscope, May 03 to May 09, 2026: Week brings relief and improved work conditions

Early week feels like someone opened a stuck window. Work conditions improve, and with that, your mind quietens. That knot of anxiety loosens, and you breathe better. You’ll also hear encouraging signs about your father’s health, which lifts the mood at home. Still, don’t get careless. Keep an eye on your mother’s comfort, her sleep,…

Read More
“Not going to be fixed”: Mike Vrabel and Jen Vrabel’s marriage on brink as counselling fails to ease fallout from Russini drama

“Not going to be fixed”: Mike Vrabel and Jen Vrabel’s marriage on brink as counselling fails to ease fallout from Russini drama

Mike Vrabel and Jen Vrabel are reportedly undergoing marriage counselling as fallout from the Dianna Russini controversy strains their relationship. Sources say Vrabel is dealing with intense emotions and focusing on work while trying to repair the situation. Jen feels embarrassed but hopes to save the marriage. Despite efforts to reconcile, insiders suggest the situation…

Read More
There is something quietly radical about a book that begins not with a theory but with a classroom moment. A student raises his hand and tells a veteran corporate leader, with polite but unmistakable firmness, that everything he just said belongs to a different world. It is an uncomfortable opening. It is also the perfect one.You Inc. arrives at a moment when the old grammar of careers — loyalty rewarded, ladders climbed, institutions trusted — is visibly crumbling. Dr. Bhaskar Das, drawing on decades in Indian corporate life and academia, does not mourn this. He diagnoses it with the precision of someone who has watched the shift from the inside, and then does something more useful: he offers a framework for living within the disruption rather than waiting for it to pass.The world Das describes is one he calls NAVI — nonlinear, accelerated, volatile and interconnected. Industries no longer transform once a generation. They transform every few years, often at the hands of companies that did not exist when established players were drawing up their last strategic plans. For individuals navigating careers within this environment, the implications are profound. The assumptions that guided earlier generations — that loyalty would be rewarded, that expertise accumulated over decades would retain its value, that institutions would provide the stability that individuals could not generate themselves — no longer hold with any reliability.His answer to this is the central idea of the book, and it is deceptively simple. Everyone must begin to think of themselves as a corporation. Not a startup chasing disruption, not an entrepreneur burning bridges, but a self-directed enterprise with a product portfolio of capabilities, an ecosystem of relationships, a strategy for the long term, and the discipline to review and renew itself continuously. Das unpacks this through concepts that feel genuinely earned rather than borrowed: the shrinking half-life of skills, the danger of experience hardening into baggage, the importance of operating in what he calls a permanent beta state, always functional, never finished.What prevents the book from becoming a management manual dressed in philosophical clothing is its texture. Das populates the narrative with characters who carry the argument on their backs rather than simply illustrating it. Aarav, the Gen Z student who refuses to plan a life around one organisation. Vikram, the senior executive quietly wondering whether his best thinking now belongs to a different era. Meera, returning to the workforce after years away, discovering that the world did not wait. And several others experiencing different walks of life. Each of them is specific enough to feel real, and the book is considerably richer for their presence.Das writes with the cadence of someone who has spent years in front of rooms full of intelligent, sceptical people. The prose is conversational without being lightweight. The philosophy is substantive without becoming airless. And the recurring aphorisms he calls Bhaskarisms — compressed, memorable, occasionally surprising — land with the force of ideas that have been lived rather than merely thought. This is a book that speaks to professionals at every career stage, from those just finding their footing to those wondering what remains when the titles and designations finally fall away.Poignantly, Dr. Bhaskar Das passed away from cancer before he could see this book completed. It was posthumously written and curated by R. Sridhar, who has honoured both the rigour and the warmth of Das’s thinking with evident care and devotion. That the ideas feel so alive on the page, so present and unhurried, is in itself a tribute worth noting. You Inc. is not simply a book about navigating an uncertain world. It is evidence that certain minds, and certain ideas, outlast the circumstances that produced them.The book is priced at Rs 399 and is available on Amazon – You Inc.: View Yourself As A Corporation End of ArticleFollow Us On Social MediaVideosIndia Tests Disaster Information System, Citizens Get ‘Extremely Severe Alert’ On PhonesIndia May Rethink Conventional Missile Strategy As Global Conflicts Redefine Warfare: Defence SecyPune: 4-Year-Old Girl Allegedly Sexually Assaulted and Murdered by 65 Year-Old-Man in Bhor‘No Further Orders Necessary’: SC Bench Rejects TMC Plea On Counting StaffFormer Diplomats React To Bangladesh Summoning Indian Envoy Over Assam CM Himanta’s Remarks‘Stop Poking Nose In India’s Internal Affairs’: JKSA Slams Pakistan Over Jamia Protest RemarksDelhi, Dhaka Move To Resume Full-Scale Visa Services Amid Ties ResetFuel Prices May Go Up Soon As Oil Firms Face Losses Amid Global Crude SpikeNine Dead As Tourist Boat Capsizes In Jabalpur, Survivors Allege Major Safety LapsesJPMorgan Executive Sued Over Sexual Abuse, Coercion And Racial Harassment Allegations In New York123PhotostoriesMet Gala 2026: From Karan Johar’s debut to Deepika Padukone’s return – rumoured Indian celebs on the guest listDog breeds that have been a part of the British Royal FamilyArchana Puran Singh to buy a new bungalow worth approximately Rs 50 crore in Madh Island; says, ‘Not sure if we can afford it but…’Blake Lively and Justin Baldoni head to court: Here’s all we know about the case ahead of the trialRs 6,700 crore project: How ‘missing link’ will improve Mumbai–Pune connectivityWhy Bengaluru’s long-awaited double-decker flyover is a big win for commutersCheteshwar Pujara, aka “The Wall’s”, ₹4 crore Gujarat villa is rooted in family living, Test cricket legacy and quiet luxuryThe love between Krishna and Yashoda holds 5 lessons every mother should know8 black superfoods you should add to your diet todayDog breeds that can survive in Australian climate123Hot PicksAssam key constituenciesKerala key constituenciesPuducherry election resultsTamil Nadu constituenciesAjay Pal SharmaBengal Poll RecordHimanta Biswa SarmaTop TrendingUS Germany relationsBank Holiday MayVande Bharat expressLPG cylinder price hikeMumbai missing linkPetrol, Diesel, LPG priceCBSE Class 12th ResultNEET 2026: Exam-day guideBSE AP SSC Class 10th ResultIPL Orange Cap

There is something quietly radical about a book that begins not with a theory but with a classroom moment. A student raises his hand and tells a veteran corporate leader, with polite but unmistakable firmness, that everything he just said belongs to a different world. It is an uncomfortable opening. It is also the perfect one.You Inc. arrives at a moment when the old grammar of careers — loyalty rewarded, ladders climbed, institutions trusted — is visibly crumbling. Dr. Bhaskar Das, drawing on decades in Indian corporate life and academia, does not mourn this. He diagnoses it with the precision of someone who has watched the shift from the inside, and then does something more useful: he offers a framework for living within the disruption rather than waiting for it to pass.The world Das describes is one he calls NAVI — nonlinear, accelerated, volatile and interconnected. Industries no longer transform once a generation. They transform every few years, often at the hands of companies that did not exist when established players were drawing up their last strategic plans. For individuals navigating careers within this environment, the implications are profound. The assumptions that guided earlier generations — that loyalty would be rewarded, that expertise accumulated over decades would retain its value, that institutions would provide the stability that individuals could not generate themselves — no longer hold with any reliability.His answer to this is the central idea of the book, and it is deceptively simple. Everyone must begin to think of themselves as a corporation. Not a startup chasing disruption, not an entrepreneur burning bridges, but a self-directed enterprise with a product portfolio of capabilities, an ecosystem of relationships, a strategy for the long term, and the discipline to review and renew itself continuously. Das unpacks this through concepts that feel genuinely earned rather than borrowed: the shrinking half-life of skills, the danger of experience hardening into baggage, the importance of operating in what he calls a permanent beta state, always functional, never finished.What prevents the book from becoming a management manual dressed in philosophical clothing is its texture. Das populates the narrative with characters who carry the argument on their backs rather than simply illustrating it. Aarav, the Gen Z student who refuses to plan a life around one organisation. Vikram, the senior executive quietly wondering whether his best thinking now belongs to a different era. Meera, returning to the workforce after years away, discovering that the world did not wait. And several others experiencing different walks of life. Each of them is specific enough to feel real, and the book is considerably richer for their presence.Das writes with the cadence of someone who has spent years in front of rooms full of intelligent, sceptical people. The prose is conversational without being lightweight. The philosophy is substantive without becoming airless. And the recurring aphorisms he calls Bhaskarisms — compressed, memorable, occasionally surprising — land with the force of ideas that have been lived rather than merely thought. This is a book that speaks to professionals at every career stage, from those just finding their footing to those wondering what remains when the titles and designations finally fall away.Poignantly, Dr. Bhaskar Das passed away from cancer before he could see this book completed. It was posthumously written and curated by R. Sridhar, who has honoured both the rigour and the warmth of Das’s thinking with evident care and devotion. That the ideas feel so alive on the page, so present and unhurried, is in itself a tribute worth noting. You Inc. is not simply a book about navigating an uncertain world. It is evidence that certain minds, and certain ideas, outlast the circumstances that produced them.The book is priced at Rs 399 and is available on Amazon – You Inc.: View Yourself As A Corporation End of ArticleFollow Us On Social MediaVideosIndia Tests Disaster Information System, Citizens Get ‘Extremely Severe Alert’ On PhonesIndia May Rethink Conventional Missile Strategy As Global Conflicts Redefine Warfare: Defence SecyPune: 4-Year-Old Girl Allegedly Sexually Assaulted and Murdered by 65 Year-Old-Man in Bhor‘No Further Orders Necessary’: SC Bench Rejects TMC Plea On Counting StaffFormer Diplomats React To Bangladesh Summoning Indian Envoy Over Assam CM Himanta’s Remarks‘Stop Poking Nose In India’s Internal Affairs’: JKSA Slams Pakistan Over Jamia Protest RemarksDelhi, Dhaka Move To Resume Full-Scale Visa Services Amid Ties ResetFuel Prices May Go Up Soon As Oil Firms Face Losses Amid Global Crude SpikeNine Dead As Tourist Boat Capsizes In Jabalpur, Survivors Allege Major Safety LapsesJPMorgan Executive Sued Over Sexual Abuse, Coercion And Racial Harassment Allegations In New York123PhotostoriesMet Gala 2026: From Karan Johar’s debut to Deepika Padukone’s return – rumoured Indian celebs on the guest listDog breeds that have been a part of the British Royal FamilyArchana Puran Singh to buy a new bungalow worth approximately Rs 50 crore in Madh Island; says, ‘Not sure if we can afford it but…’Blake Lively and Justin Baldoni head to court: Here’s all we know about the case ahead of the trialRs 6,700 crore project: How ‘missing link’ will improve Mumbai–Pune connectivityWhy Bengaluru’s long-awaited double-decker flyover is a big win for commutersCheteshwar Pujara, aka “The Wall’s”, ₹4 crore Gujarat villa is rooted in family living, Test cricket legacy and quiet luxuryThe love between Krishna and Yashoda holds 5 lessons every mother should know8 black superfoods you should add to your diet todayDog breeds that can survive in Australian climate123Hot PicksAssam key constituenciesKerala key constituenciesPuducherry election resultsTamil Nadu constituenciesAjay Pal SharmaBengal Poll RecordHimanta Biswa SarmaTop TrendingUS Germany relationsBank Holiday MayVande Bharat expressLPG cylinder price hikeMumbai missing linkPetrol, Diesel, LPG priceCBSE Class 12th ResultNEET 2026: Exam-day guideBSE AP SSC Class 10th ResultIPL Orange Cap

There is something quietly radical about a book that begins not with a theory but with a classroom moment. A student raises his hand and tells a veteran corporate leader, with polite but unmistakable firmness, that everything he just said belongs to a different world. It is an uncomfortable opening. It is also the perfect…

Read More
‘It was very difficult’: Harmanpreet Kaur reacts to key absence in India’s T20 World Cup squad | Cricket News

‘It was very difficult’: Harmanpreet Kaur reacts to key absence in India’s T20 World Cup squad | Cricket News

Harmanpreet Kaur (PTI Photo) NEW DELHI: India captain Harmanpreet Kaur admitted that Amanjot Kaur’s injury has created a big problem for the team ahead of the Women’s T20 World Cup in England, but she remains hopeful the replacements can deliver when needed.Seam-bowling all-rounder Amanjot has been ruled out for four to five months with a…

Read More