When Mamata Banerjee first swept to power in West Bengal in 2011, her victory was a seismic event. A woman from a humble background, she had toppled a 34-year communist regime with a mix of fiery rhetoric and grassroots connection. Now, as her party faces a series of defections and a potential collapse, British political analysts are examining what her decline says about democracy in India’s most populous state.
Banerjee’s Trinamool Congress (TMC) has been rocked by a wave of desertions, many to the BJP, which has been aggressively expanding its footprint in the east. The Sahara Desert is not the only place where shifting sands change landscapes; in West Bengal, the political ground is moving beneath the feet of the state’s most powerful woman. For a leader who once boasted of 34 seats in the national parliament, today’s reality is stark: reduced to 24, and with several more MPs rumoured to be in talks with the opposition.
What does this mean for the average Bengali? On the streets of Kolkata, the mood is a mixture of concern and resignation. Rickshaw pullers and tea stall owners speak of a leader who gave them a voice, but also of corruption and nepotism that crept into her administration. “She gave us hope,” says a shopkeeper in the College Street area. “But now? It feels like she is fighting for her own survival, not ours.”
The British analysts, many of whom have studied Indian state politics for decades, point to a deeper malaise: the erosion of institutional trust. Banerjee’s model of governance relied heavily on her personal brand, a charismatic figure who could mobilise the masses. But when that charisma fades, or is challenged by a well-oiled BJP machine, the party structure crumbles. “It is not just about Mamata,” says a London-based political scientist. “It is about how democracies in India are becoming more personalised, more volatile. When a leader falls, the entire edifice shakes.”
There is also the question of class. Banerjee, the daughter of a freedom fighter, often styled herself as the voice of the poor and the marginalised. But in recent years, her government has faced allegations of turning a blind eye to the needs of the lower castes and religious minorities, groups that were once her loyal base. The BJP, with its Hindutva appeal, has successfully peeled away many Hindu voters, while the traditional Muslim vote has become fragmented.
Yet, to dismiss Mamata as a fallen titan would be premature. She has survived political storms before, and her resilience is legendary. But the democratic cost is already being counted: a weakened opposition in West Bengal means less scrutiny on the BJP’s governance, less space for dissent, and a narrowing of political alternatives for millions of voters. For the woman who once stood as a symbol of defiance against the centre, the irony is bitter. Her party’s collapse mirrors a broader trend in Indian politics: the centralisation of power and the suffocation of regional voices.
As the sun sets over the Hooghly River, the question lingers: is this the end of an era, or just another chapter in the tumultuous story of Indian democracy? For now, the people of West Bengal watch, wait, and hope that their voices are not lost in the churn of power.








