advertisement
Select a constituency

Moyna Assembly Election 2024

Moyna Assembly Election 2026
Moyna Assembly constituency

Moyna, a community development block in the Tamluk subdivision of Purba Medinipur district, is a general category Assembly constituency. It forms one of the seven segments of the Tamluk Lok Sabha seat and consists of the Moyna community development block, along with five gram panchayats of the Tamluk block.

Established in 1951, Moyna has taken part in all 17 Assembly elections held in West Bengal. The CPI(M) won six times and the CPI five times, with the Congress party securing three victories. The Trinamool Congress took the seat twice, while the BJP has one win to its credit.

Bhushan Chandra Dolai gave the Trinamool Congress its first victory here in 2011, defeating sitting CPI(M) MLA Sk Mujibur Rahman by 9,957 votes. Dolai held the seat in 2016 with a bigger margin of 12,124 votes against Congress’s Manik Bhowmik. The BJP, which had polled just 2.59 per cent in 2011 and 3.24 per cent in 2016, made a dramatic breakthrough in 2021 when its candidate Ashok Dinda, a former Indian cricketer, won by 1,260 votes over Trinamool’s Sangram Dolui.

Lok Sabha trends from the Moyna Assembly segment follow a similar path. The Trinamool Congress led the CPI(M) by 16,912 votes in 2009 and 39,803 votes in 2014. The BJP, with 1.53 per cent in 2009 and 4.64 per cent in 2014, surged to 42.70 per cent in 2019, though Trinamool still led by 12,383 votes. The BJP then took the lead in 2024 by 9,948 votes over Trinamool.

Moyna had 268,091 registered voters in 2024, up from 255,164 in 2021, 244,503 in 2019, 230,099 in 2016, and 196,999 in 2011. Scheduled Castes form the largest group at 22.15 per cent, followed by Muslims at 11.10 per cent. It is a mainly rural seat, with 94.69 per cent of voters in villages and 5.32 per cent in urban pockets. Turnout stays high, at 90.67 per cent in 2011, 87.40 per cent in 2016, and 88.09 per cent in 2021 for Assembly polls, dipping slightly to 85.16 per cent in 2019 and 84.04 per cent in 2024 for Lok Sabha elections.

Moyna has a recorded history centred on Moynagarh, a fortified settlement that once stood as a powerful local kingdom in the Medinipur region. The fort, also known as Killah Moynachoura, lies near the ancient port city of Tamralipta and was encircled by concentric moats, mounds and dense forests, making it a difficult target for invaders. Local traditions and historical accounts link Moynagarh to the legendary King Lausen of the Dharmamangal literature and later to the Bahubalindra royal family, who moved their capital here in the sixteenth century, fortified the site and resisted neighbouring chiefs and incursions from the Bengal sultans. Over time, the fort declined, but its temples, shrines and dargah, along with the surviving earthworks and moats, continue to testify to Moyna’s past as an important political and religious centre in coastal Bengal.

Moyna lies in the upper Indo-Gangetic plain and eastern coastal plains of Purba Medinipur, part of the deltaic terrain fed by rivers like the Haldi, Rupnarayan, Rasulpur, Bagui, and Keleghai. The area faces regular tidal floods, with flat, fertile land suited to agriculture but vulnerable to waterlogging and cyclones. Embankments and drainage canals help manage inundation, while tube wells and shallow irrigation support multiple crops a year.

Agriculture forms the mainstay of its economy, with paddy as the principal crop alongside pulses, oilseeds, and vegetables. Pisciculture thrives in ponds and channels, contributing a significant income and employing thousands in Moyna. River water aids irrigation, though backflow from tides affects low lying fields. Rural markets, small trade, and daily wage work supplement farm incomes.

Moyna connects to Tamluk, about 17 km east, and Kolaghat, around 19 km north by road and rail. Kolkata lies roughly 90 to 96 km west. Panskura is 13 km north, Haldia 46 km south east, and Kharagpur 51 km south west. The district headquarters at Tamluk is 17 km away, while other Purba Medinipur towns like Egra and Contai fall within 40 to 60 km.

The Left Front-Congress alliance has slipped into political oblivion in Moyna by polling just 2.28 per cent in 2021 and 3.04 per cent in 2024, and is unlikely to have any impact on the 2026 Assembly election, which is now shaping up as a straight fight between the BJP, which won the seat in 2021 and led in 2024, and the Trinamool Congress, which will try to win it back.

(Ajay Jha)

advertisement

Past Moyna Assembly Election Results

WINNER

Ashoke Dinda

img
BJP
Number of Votes 1,08,109
Winning Party Voting %48.2
Winning Margin %0.6

Other Candidates - Moyna Assembly Constituency

  • Name
    Party
    Votes
  • Sangram Kumar Dolai

    AITC

    1,06,849
  • Manik Bhaumik

    INC

    5,108
  • Subrata Bag

    SUCI

    1,674
  • NOTA

    NOTA

    1,335
  • Kamal Bag

    BSP

    766
  • Mahammad Ali Sk

    IND

    361
  • Biplab Barai

    IND

    232
WINNER

Sangram Kumar Dolai

img
AITC
Number of Votes 1,00,980
Winning Party Voting %50.3
Winning Margin %6.1

Other Candidates - Moyna Assembly Constituency

  • Name
    Party
    Votes
  • Manik Bhowmik

    INC

    88,856
  • Das Sukesh Ranjan

    BJP

    6,506
  • Nimai Guria

    BHNP

    1,907
  • Madan Samanta

    SUCI

    1,524
  • NOTA

    NOTA

    1,182

FAQ's

When will voting take place in Moyna? Under what phase will voting take place?
When will the election result for Moyna be declared?
Who won the Assembly election from Moyna in 2021?
What was the winning vote percentage of BJP in Moyna in 2021?
How many votes did Ashoke Dinda receive in the 2021 Moyna election?
Who was the runner-up in Moyna in 2021?
When will the West Bengal Assembly Elections 2026 be held?
How many seats are there in the West Bengal Assembly?
Which party won the last West Bengal Assembly Elections?
When will the West Bengal Assembly Elections 2026 results be announced?
advertisement

Digital battle for Bengal: TMC pulls ahead of BJP in online campaigning

India Today’s Open-Source Intelligence (OSINT) team analysed data from the public ad-transparency libraries of Meta and Google. The analysis shows that between December 18 and January 16, political advertisers in West Bengal ran thousands of advertisements, spending a combined Rs 6.38 crore across Facebook, Instagram, Google and YouTube.

I will be devastated if…: PM Modi urges crowd to step down from stands at Bengal's Malda rally

During his address at a public rally in Malda, West Bengal on Saturday, Prime Minister Narendra Modi appealed to people who had climbed onto makeshift stands to come down, stressing concerns for their safety. “I’m appealing to those of you who have climbed up, please come down. If anything happens to you, if you get hurt, I will be deeply saddened,” he said. Emphasising that their well-being mattered more than their enthusiasm, Modi added, “Your love for me means the world to me, but your lives are even more precious.” PM Modi is on a two-day visit to eastern India, during which he is set to criss-cross poll-bound West Bengal and Assam, combining infrastructure launches with political outreach as the countdown to the 2026 assembly elections enters a crucial phase.

1:55

How BJP is trying to sink Mamata with her very own Singur script

Months before the 2026 Assembly elections in West Bengal, Mamata Banerjee's political nursery Singur has re-emerged as a flashpoint. The BJP has promised that it will bring Tata back to Singur, from where the company was forced to move to Gujarat after Mamata's movement in 2008. PM Narendra Modi is scheduled to address a rally in Singur on January 18, where farmers who had earlier protested, would be seated in the front row.

advertisement