Bangladesh General Election Which political parties are contesting and what happened in the last three elections?

Bangladesh General Election Which political parties are contesting and what happened in the last three elections?


Bangladesh General Election: The National Citizen Party, a fresh centrist force spearheaded by 27-year-old student activist Nahid Islam, promises sweeping reforms including a new constitution, improved healthcare and climate action.

Dhaka:

Bangladesh gears up for its general election on February 12 (Thursday), the first since Sheikh Hasina’s 2024 ouster, featuring a dramatic shift. With Awami League (AL) suspended and sidelined, frontrunners Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) and Jamaat-e-Islami lead a fragmented field of 51 parties contesting 300 Jatiya Sangsad seats.

Major parties contesting in 2026: BNP leads, Jamaat resurgent and NCP emerges

Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP): Centre-right powerhouse led by ailing Khaleda Zia; son Tarique Rahman (exile returnee) drives from London roots. Ideology: Nationalism, economic liberalism, anti-corruption. Polls show 33-35 per cent support; conceded seats to allies like Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam.

Jamaat-e-Islami (JI): Islamic democracy advocates under Shafiqur Rahman; 80 per cent fresh faces signal youth push. Polls: 30-34 per cent support. Allied with 11-party bloc including NCP; fields first Hindu candidate Krishna Nandi for minorities. Past BNP coalition (2001-06).

National Citizen Party (NCP): New centrist upstart led by 27-year-old Nahid Islam (student activist). Pledges reform, new constitution, healthcare, climate focus. Weak infrastructure but reform buzz; rocky Jamaat-e-Islamiย alliance saw resignations.

51 parties registered and eight sit out (e.g., Workers Party). BNP-Jamaat-e-Islamiย bipolar race dominates 1,981 candidates; BNP absorbed mergers like Liberal Democratic Party. Minorities: 80 candidates (BNP: 6, CPB: 17).

2024 general election: Hasina’s Awami Leagueย sweeps amid boycott chaos

Sheikh Hasina’s Awami Leagueย crushed opposition, winning 224/300 seats (76 per cent) in boycotted January polls- lowest turnout ever (10-40 per cent). BNP-led alliance abstained, alleging rigging. Awami Leagueย dominated since 2008; violence killed dozens pre-poll.

2018 general election: Awami League’s ‘rigged’ landslide, BNP crippled

Hasina’s Awami League grabbed 288/300 seats (96 per cent) amid fraud cries- video evidence of ballot stuffing. BNP boycotted after arrests; Khaleda jailed. Turnout ~80 per cent, but opposition called it “farce.” Jamaat-e-Islamiย won one seat.

2014 election: AL dominates boycotted poll

Hasina’s Awami League secured 234/300 (78 per cent) in low-turnout (40 per cent) January vote; BNP boycotted over caretaker govt row. Violence claimed 100+ lives; Khaleda Zia out. JI allied briefly but fared poorly. Post-2024 uprising, BNP/JI eye revenge in this “biggest democratic process of 2026” (127 million voters). Polls favour BNP, but alliances fracture and violence loom.

ALSO READ: Bangladesh Election: How different political outcomes could reshape New Delhi-Dhaka ties

ALSO READ: Bangladesh to hold national elections on Feb 12, major parties release final candidate lists



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