Bishnupur is a key legislative assembly constituency in West Bengal, located in the Bankura district. Bishnupur has a total of 272,720 registered electors as per the 2026 electoral rolls, comprising 139,105 male, 133,596 female, and 19 third-gender voters.
It often sees intense battles between major parties. This election, the contest is heating up as CPM’s Shyamal Dal takes on BJP’s Viswajit Khan and INC’s Arghya Naskar in a high-stakes triangular fight. In the 2021 assembly elections, the seat was won by All India Trinamool Congress. Dilip Mondal, from All India Trinamool Congress defeated Agniswar Naskar of the Bharatiya Janata Party by a margin of 58832 votes.
From election campaigns to final results, follow all developments related to Bishnupur assembly constituency, including winner details, vote margins, and more on our dedicated page.
| Candidate's Name | Party | Votes | Vote Share |
|---|---|---|---|
|
Dilip Mondal
Winner
|
All India Trinamool Congress |
136,509
Lead:
58,832
|
57% |
| Agniswar Naskar | Bharatiya Janata Party | 77,677 | 33% |
| Jhuma Kayal | Communist Party of India (Marxist) | 17,995 | 8% |
| Rabindranath Ranjan | Bahujan Samaj Party | 2,709 | 1% |
| Nota | None Of The Above | 1,863 | 1% |
| Uttam Naskar | Independent | 817 | 0% |
| Candidate's Name | Party | Votes | Vote Share |
|---|---|---|---|
|
Dilip Mondal
Winner
|
All India Trinamool Congress |
107,129
Lead:
30,630
|
53% |
| Aloke Sardar | Communist Party Of India (Marxist) | 76,499 | 38% |
| Candidate's Name | Party | Votes | Vote Share |
|---|---|---|---|
|
Dilip Mondal
Winner
|
All India Trinamool Congress |
95,912
Lead:
25,050
|
53.90% |
| Sudhin Sinha | Communist Party Of India (MARXIST) | 70,862 | 39.80% |
| Sekhar Naskar | Bharatiya Janta Party | 5,745 | 3.20% |
| Prabhat Kiran Mandal | Independent | 3,636 | 2% |
| Gopinath Naskar | Party For Democratic Socialism | 1,735 | 1% |
| Year | Candidate's Name | Party | Votes | Lead | Vote Share |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2021 | Dilip Mondal | AITC | 136,509 | 58,832 | 57% |
| 2016 | Dilip Mondal | AITC | 107,129 | 30,630 | 53% |
| 2011 | Dilip Mondal | AITC | 95,912 | 25,050 | 53.90% |
| Year | Candidate's Name | Party | Votes | Vote Share |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2021 | Dilip Mondal | AITC |
136,509
(Lead:
58,832)
|
57% |
| Agniswar Naskar | BJP | 77,677 | 33% | |
| 2016 | Dilip Mondal | AITC |
107,129
(Lead:
30,630)
|
53% |
| Aloke Sardar | CPM | 76,499 | 38% | |
| 2011 | Dilip Mondal | AITC |
95,912
(Lead:
25,050)
|
53.90% |
| Sudhin Sinha | CPI(M) | 70,862 | 39.80% |
All 294 Assembly Constituencies in West Bengal
Dilip Mondal of the All India Trinamool Congress (AITC) won the Bishnupur Assembly seat in the 2021 elections, defeating Agniswar Naskar of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) by a margin of 58832 votes.
The strike rate in the Bishnupur constituency is 100% AITC and 0% BJP, with AITC won 3 times since the 1977 elections.
Dilip Mondal (AITC) received 57.00% vote share.
Agniswar Naskar (BJP) received 33.00% vote share.
Dilip Mondal (AITC) won the 2021 election with 136509 votes, leading by 58832 votes and securing a 57.00% vote share.
The Bishnupur Assembly constituency falls under the Bishnupur (sc) Lok Sabha constituency of Bankura district.
Dilip Mondal (AITC) won the Bishnupur Assembly seat in 2021 with a margin of 58832 votes over Agniswar Naskar (BJP).
The Bishnupur Assembly constituency is part of the Bishnupur (sc) Lok Sabha constituency, which includes other areas like Barjora, Onda, Katulpur (sc), Indus (sc), Sonamukhi (sc), Khandaghosh (sc).
The top candidates in the Bishnupur Assembly Election 2021 were:
Dilip Mondal (AITC)
Agniswar Naskar (BJP)
Jhuma Kayal (CPI(M))
These candidates were the main contenders for the seat, with Dilip Mondal (AITC) emerging as the winner.
This page contains historical election results sourced from the Election Commission of India (ECI). It is for archival and informational purposes only and does not represent current or ongoing election updates. The information provided on this page about the current and previous elections in the constituency is sourced from various publicly available platforms including https://old.eci.gov.in/statistical-report/statistical-reports/ and https://affidavit.eci.gov.in/. The ECI is the authoritative source for election-related data in India, and we rely on their official records for the content presented here. However, due to the complexity of electoral processes and potential data discrepancies, there may be occasional inaccuracies or omissions in the information provided.