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2026 Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Election to the legislative assembly of Tamil Nadu

2026 Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly Election

← 2021By April–May 20262031 →

All 234 elected seats in theTamil Nadu Legislative Assembly
118 seats needed for a majority
Opinion polls
 
The Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu, Thiru MK Stalin.jpg
Palanisamy.jpg
LeaderM. K. StalinEdappadi K. Palaniswami
PartyDMKAIADMK
AllianceSPANDA
Leader since20182017
Leader's seatKolathurEdappadi
Last election45.70%, 159 seats39.29%, 75 seats
Current seats15865
Seats neededSteadyIncrease 53

 
Tamil Eelam Champion Seeman Speech Outside UN headquarters Geneva 002.jpg
Vijay at Protest of the Nadigar Sangam.jpg
LeaderSeemanVijay
PartyNTKTVK
Leader since20102024
Leader's seatTBDTBD
Last election6.58%, 0 seatsNew
Current seats00
Seats neededIncrease 118Increase 118

Map of the assembly constituencies in Tamil Nadu

IncumbentChief Minister

M. K. Stalin
DMK



The 2026 Tamil Nadu legislative assembly election is expected to be held inApril–May 2026 to elect all 234 members of theTamil Nadu Legislative Assembly.[1]M. K. Stalin is the incumbentChief Minister ofTamil Nadu.

Background

[edit]

In theprevious assembly elections, The DMK won 133 constituencies on its own, receiving anabsolute majority in the sixteenth Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly, whereas itsSPA alliance saw victory in a total of 159 constituencies. Meanwhile, theNDA alliance captured 75 constituencies, out of which the AIADMK had won 66. Other parties, alliances, andindependent candidates did not secure any seats. After spending a decade as theopposition party, the DMK won Tamil Nadu from the AIADMK, which reigned the state for two consecutive terms (2011–2021). After the victory,M. K. Stalin became the nextchief minister of the state. The AIADMK led byEdappadi K. Palaniswami assumed the position of the opposition party at thesixteenth Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly.[2][3][4][5][6]

TheStalin administration was noted for various developmental projects and the implementation of various schemes like Free travel facilities in city and town buses for women and Rs 1000 monthly financial assistance scheme for women.[7][8] Though the DMK promised ₹1000 for all women in their 2021 election manifesto, The government delayed the implementation by 28 months and imposed additional eligibility criteria.[9][10] Critics also highlight poor implementation and limited coverage under the free bus scheme.[11] He was also noted for implementing reformist decisions like appointing trained aspirants of all castes as priests in temples which are under the control ofHR & CE Department.[12]

Since the DMK came to power in 2021, Tamil Nadu has seen significant hikes inTNEBelectricity tariffs (up to 45%),[13]property taxes (up to 150%),[14]water charges (5–10%),Aavin milk prices (25%),[15] and professional taxes (35%). These increases have raised the cost of living and faced strong opposition from the public, businesses, and political parties. Many citizens, especially low- and middle-income groups, expressed concerns over the financial burden caused by these successive hikes. Protests and demands for rollbacks have been common amid risinginflation and economic challenges.[16][17]

The rising number ofNEET aspirant suicides in Tamil Nadu has raised serious concerns, with over 20 students reportedly dying by suicide by 2025, beginning with thedeath of Anitha in 2017. The opposition has strongly criticized the DMK government, accusing it of misleading students by promising to abolish NEET in Tamil Nadu if elected in 2021. They highlighted that between September 2021 and March 2025, 19 students took their own lives due to anxiety and pressure related to the exam.[18][19] Both the DMK and the earlier AIADMK governments have consistently opposed NEET, arguing that it disadvantages students from poor and rural backgrounds and instead pushed for admissions based on Class 12 marks. The AIADMK passed two anti-NEET bills in 2017, but neither received Presidential assent. Similarly, the DMK passed an anti-NEET bill in 2021, re-adopted it in 2022 after the Governor returned it, but it was ultimately rejected by the President in 2025.[20] When Opposition Leader Palaniswami asked MinisterUdhayanidhi Stalin to reveal the “secret” he had mentioned during the previous election campaign about getting NEET banned, Udhayanidhi responded, “The legal struggle until NEET is cancelled is the secret.”[21][22]

Concerns were raised over the deterioration oflaw and order in the state due to the rising crime rate, including the murders of political leaders such asBahujan Samaj Party State PresidentK. Armstrong, Mining corruption whistleblower Jagaber Ali, and district-level functionaries of various parties.[23]Drug Smuggling by DMK functionary Jaffer Sadiq and increasing drug use among youth further highlighted challenges in the state's law enforcement and social governance.[24][25] Disturbing incidents such as the Vengaivayal water contamination, and theKallakurichi hooch tragedy which claimed 66 lives and caste discrimination against dalits have drawn public concern.[26][27][28][29] According to data presented in the Lok Sabha, the number ofcustodial deaths in the state rose from 63 in 2020–21 to 109 in 2021–22, marking a significant 73% increase.[30][31] In October 2024, five people died and nearly 100 were admitted to government hospitals aroundMarina Beach due todizziness,dehydration andextreme exhaustion during theIAFAir Show, which was witnessed by 15 lakh people.[32] The opposition criticized the state government for not making adequate arrangements to regulate traffic, manage the crowd, and provide adequate public transport and drinking water facilities.[33] In December 2024, An alleged sexual assault of a female student on the premises ofAnna University in Chennai has sparked widespread outrage across political and student communities in Tamil Nadu. The accused has been sentenced to life imprisonment.[34][35]

The controversies surrounding sitting DMK ministers included the arrest and resignation ofV. Senthil Balaji in 2023–25, whom theSupreme Court directed to choose between keeping his cabinet post and protecting his bail during theEnforcement Directorate (ED) investigation into the 2015Cash-for-Jobs scam, a money laundering case. Meanwhile,Ponmudy resigned amid sustained criticism from the Madras High Court, within the DMK, and from outside, over his derogatory remarks about hindu religious symbols and women.[36]

AIADMK alliance

[edit]

On 25 September 2023, the party's secretaries advisory meeting, led bygeneral secretaryEdappadi K. Palaniswami, was held in the Puratchi Thalaivar M.G.R. Maaligai. At the meeting, it was decided to withdraw from theBharatiya Janata Party-ledNational Democratic Alliance, and it was officially announced by deputy general secretaryK. P. Munusamy after the meeting.[37][38][39]

In the2024 general election, theAIADMK-led Alliance consisting ofDesiya Murpokku Dravida Kazhagam (DMDK),Puthiya Tamilagam (PT), and theSocial Democratic Party of India (SDPI) contested in the state ofTamil Nadu and the union territories ofPuducherry andAndaman and Nicobar Islands for the18th Lok Sabha polls. In the alliance, the AIADMK contested 36 constituencies, and the DMDK contested five constituencies. The party-led alliance lost in all the constituencies it contested, and theIndian National Developmental Inclusive Alliance swept the election in Tamil Nadu and Puducherry.[40]On 11 April 2025,AIADMK General SecretaryEdappadi K. Palaniswami andBJP leader and Home MinisterAmit Shah announced their alliance for 2026 Tamil Nadu Assembly election on a Joint Press Conference at Chennai.[41][42] Ahead of the 2026 Tamil Nadu Assembly elections, AIADMK General SecretaryEdappadi K. Palaniswami launched theMakkalai Kaappom, Thamizhagathai Meetpom (Let us protect the people and reclaimTamil Nadu) statewide campaign tour covering all 234 constituencies in phases, starting fromMettupalayam inCoimbatore on 7 July 2025.[43][44]

TVK formation

[edit]

On 2 February 2024, Vijay announced the launch of his political party, Tamilaga Vettri Kazhagam (TVK), and stated its intent to contest the2026 elections.[45][46] The formation of TVK marked the culmination of a long-standing political buildup from his fan base. Over the years, Vijay's fan clubs—reportedly numbering around 85,000 across Tamil Nadu, each with at least 25 members—had been organized under Vijay Makkal Iyakkam, a registered welfare association. These fan clubs have now transformed into a political cadre forming the backbone of TVK's grassroots structure.[47]

The party’s leadership was formalized during a meeting with 110 executive members, where Vijay announced key office-bearers, including the General Secretary, Treasurer, Head Office Secretary, and Deputy Secretary for Policy Promotion. On the same day, the party submitted its application for registration with the Election Commission of India.

Membership was Voter ID–linked, and a dedicated app for digital enrollment was launched on International Women's Day. Within hours of launch, the number of party enrollees reached several lakhs, primarily consisting of youth, women, and household heads. TVK also appointed a woman party member to head the membership campaign, emphasizing the organization’s focus on women’s participation and safety.

N. Anand is currently serving as the general secretary of Tamilaga Vettri Kazhagam.[48] In July 2024, Vijay publicly called for a ban on theNational Eligibility cum Entrance Test (NEET), stating that it was biased against rural students. He also demanded that the subjects of education and sanitation be moved from theConcurrent List back to theState List.[49][50]

Vijay and TVK issued strong statements against the Citizenship (Amendment) Act and the handling of caste and gender-based violence cases in Puducherry, Kallakurichi, and Anna University. Vijay personally visited victims of the hooch tragedy and hoisted women’s safety as a key issue. The party also organized academic award functions promoting education as a tool for upliftment, and Vijay emphasized this by declaring education as “invaluable wealth.”

In September 2024, TVK announced its ideological alignment withleft-of-centre values, embracingAmbedkarism,Periyarism, andMarxism.[51] The party rejected any association with right-wing ideologies and declared its political opposition to the rulingDMK in Tamil Nadu and theBJP at the national level. Ahead of the party’s first political conference, Vijay paid tribute to leaders like Periyar, Ambedkar, Kamaraj, and Muthuramalinga Thevar, signaling ideological clarity.[51][52]

On 27 October 2024, TVK held its first political conference inVikravandi, attended by over 800,000 people.[53] The event showcased large cutouts of Periyar, Ambedkar, Velu Nachiyar, Kamaraj, and others, affirming them as TVK’s ideological pillars.[54][55] Vijay officially unveiled the party’s ideology as “Secular Social Justice”, supportingsocial justice,secularism,egalitarianism, two-language policy, anddemocracy.[56][57]

During the conference, Vijay indirectly targeted BJP and DMK, calling BJP an "ideological opponent" and DMK a "political adversary" due to alleged corruption and dynastic politics.[58] On 3 November 2024, the party passed 26 resolutions criticizing both central and state governments.[59][60]

In the months that followed, Vijay authored multiple open letters in the style of C. N. Annadurai, which received widespread attention. TVK condemned police inaction in various regions and called for restoring state rights, including opposition to the Governor's powers. Vijay also visited Parandur during airport land acquisition protests, where he urged the government to consider an alternate site.

Since the conference, TVK has attracted substantial youth support, prompting traditional parties like DMK and AIADMK to increase efforts to retain their voter base ahead of the 2026 elections.[61]

On 13 February 2025, TVK announced a large-scale organizational expansion aimed at strengthening its booth-level presence across Tamil Nadu. The party declared its plan to appoint over 70,000 booth agents and restructure its internal hierarchy in preparation for the 2026 state elections. This marked a shift in focus from movement-building and ideological outreach to electoral consolidation and field-level readiness.[62]

On 26 April 2025, Vijay addressed a booth agents and party functionaries meeting in Coimbatore as part of TVK’s 2026 election preparations. He instructed cadre to enrol new members and strengthen the party at the grassroots, with the goal of deploying over 70,000 booth-level agents across Tamil Nadu. Reaffirming TVK’s commitment to clean politics, Vijay vowed to establish a corruption-free, transparent, and accountable government. He urged party workers to stay honest, reject bribes, and win public trust through genuine service.[63][64]

On 9 June 2025, TVK held a major induction event at its Panaiyur headquarters in Chennai, during which several individuals—including former MLAs, retired officials, and members of other political parties—formally joined the party in the presence of TVK founder Vijay. As part of this expansion, K.G. Arunraj, a former Indian Revenue Service (IRS) officer, was appointed as the General Secretary for Propaganda and Policy Development. Arunraj’s entry was seen as a significant step in professionalizing the party’s organizational and ideological outreach ahead of the 2026 Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly elections.[65][66]On 27 September 2025, acrowd crush took place during a political rally inKarur,Tamil Nadu, India, that was hosted by actor-politicianVijay's party,Tamilaga Vettri Kazhagam (TVK). 41 people were killed and 80 to 120 people were injured.[67][68]

Schedule

[edit]
Poll eventSchedule
Notification dateTBD
Last date for filing nominationTBD
Scrutiny of nominationTBD
Last date for withdrawal of nominationTBD
Date of pollTBD
Date of counting of votesTBD

Parties and alliances

[edit]

Secular Progressive Alliance

[edit]

  Secular Progressive Alliance

PartyFlagSymbolPhotoLeaderSeats contested
Dravida Munnetra KazhagamM. K. StalinTBDTBD
Kongunadu Makkal Desia KatchiE. R. EswaranTBD
Manithaneya Makkal KatchiM. H. JawahirullahTBD
Tamizhaga Vazhvurimai KatchiT. VelmuruganTBD
Adhi Tamilar PeravaiR. AthiyamanTBD
Makkal Viduthalai KatchiS. K. Murugavel RajanTBD
Indian National CongressK. SelvaperunthagaiTBD
Communist Party of India (Marxist)P. ShanmugamTBD
Communist Party of IndiaM. VeerapandianTBD
Viduthalai Chiruthaigal KatchiThol. ThirumavalavanTBD
Makkal Needhi MaiamTorch LightKamal HaasanTBD
Marumalarchi Dravida Munnetra KazhagamVaikoTBD
Indian Union Muslim LeagueK. M. Kader MohideenTBD

AIADMK-led National Democratic Alliance

[edit]

  AIADMK-Led National Democratic Alliance

PartyFlagElectoral symbolPhotoLeaderSeats contested
All India Anna Dravida Munnetra KazhagamEdappadi K. PalaniswamiTBDTBD
Indhiya Jananayaga KatchiT. R. PaarivendharTBD
Puratchi Bharatham KatchiM. Jagan MoorthyTBD
Puthiya Needhi KatchiA. C. ShanmugamTBD
Bharatiya Janata PartyNainar NagenthranTBD
Tamil Maanila Congress (Moopanar)G. K. VasanTBD

Naam Tamilar Katchi

[edit]

  Naam Tamilar Katchi

Political partyFlagSymbolPhotoLeaderSeats contested
Naam Tamilar KatchiSeeman234

Tamilaga Vettri Kazhagam

[edit]

  Tamilaga Vettri Kazhagam

Political partyFlagSymbolPhotoLeaderSeats contested
Tamilaga Vettri KazhagamVijayTBD

Others

[edit]
PartyFlagSymbolPhotoLeaderSeats contested
Bahujan Samaj PartyP. AnandanTBD
Pattali Makkal KatchiAnbumani RamadossTBD
Desiya Murpokku Dravida KazhagamPremallatha VijayakantTBD
All India Forward BlocP. V. KathiravanTBD
Puthiya TamilagamK. KrishnasamyTBD
Tamizhaga Makkal Munnetra KazhagamB. John PandianTBD
Republican Party of IndiaC. K. ThamizharasanTBD
Perunthalaivar Makkal KatchiN. R. DhanapalanTBD
Inthiya Makkal Kalvi Munnetra KazhagamT. Devanathan YadavTBD
Amma Makkal Munnettra KazagamT. T. V. DhinakaranTBD
Social Democratic Party of IndiaV. M. S. Mohamed MubarakTBD
All India N.R. Congress
N. RangasamyTBD
IndependentO. PanneerselvamTBD

Surveys and polls

[edit]

Opinion polls

[edit]
Polling agencyPublication dateMajorityref
SPANDAOthers

Exit polls

[edit]
Polling agencyPublication dateMajorityref
SPANDAOthers

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
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  26. ^"Human faeces in drinking water tank: Dalits in Tamil Nadu's Vengaivayal vow to continue protest".New Indian Express. 27 January 2025.
  27. ^"Kallakurichi hooch tragedy: Death toll rises to 66".The Hindu. 10 July 2024.
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  31. ^"One Year of DMK Government – Law and Order Failed, Custodial Deaths and so on".India Herald. 11 May 2022.
  32. ^"Five persons die due to heatstroke after IAF air show on the Marina".The Hindu. 7 October 2024.
  33. ^"DMK government failed to prepare adequately for air show: Palaniswami".The Hindu. 7 October 2024.
  34. ^"Anna University sexual assault case: Convict Gnanasekar to serve 30-year jail term without remission".The Hindu. 2 June 2025.
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  36. ^"Tamil Nadu Ministers Senthilbalaji, Ponmudy quit after strong court remarks".The Hindu. 28 April 2025.
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  43. ^"Palaniswami to launch election tour from Coimbatore on July 7".newindianexpress. 28 June 2025. Retrieved5 July 2025.
  44. ^"Edappadi K Palaniswami kicks off AIADMK campaign for 2026 polls".newindianexpress. 8 July 2025. Retrieved8 July 2025.
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  48. ^Service, Express News (16 September 2024)."TVK condemns Sri Lankan navy's 'aggression' on TN fishers, gives aid to boat owner".The New Indian Express. Retrieved22 October 2024.
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  50. ^"Actor-politician Vijay demands abolishment of NEET and for education to be under State list".The Hindu. 3 July 2024.ISSN 0971-751X. Retrieved26 October 2024.
  51. ^abTamilarasu, Prabhakar (4 September 2024)."'Thalapathy' Vijay is busy reading Ambedkar as his party plans to lean Left of Centre. Right's a no go".ThePrint. Retrieved26 October 2024.
  52. ^G, Angeshwar (11 March 2024).""கல் எங்களின் ஆயுதமல்ல, அறிவாயுதமே எங்கள் தோழர்களின் ஆயுதம்" - வேல்முருகனுக்கு தவெக லயோலா மணி பதில்!".Puthiyathalaimurai (in Tamil). Retrieved26 October 2024.
  53. ^மலர், மாலை (27 October 2024)."த.வெ.க. மாநாட்டுக்கு 8 லட்சம் பேர் வருகை - 7 மணிக்குள் நிகழ்ச்சியை முடிக்க காவல்துறை அறிவுறுத்தல்".www.maalaimalar.com (in Tamil). Retrieved27 October 2024.
  54. ^Staff, T. N. M. (26 October 2024)."Tamil Nadu: Vijay hints at TVK's ideologies ahead of first political conference".The News Minute. Retrieved26 October 2024.
  55. ^Shivani, k Nitika (26 October 2024)."Icons of social justice, Tamil pride and Vijay: What TVK debut rally has in store".The South First. Retrieved26 October 2024.
  56. ^Cite error: The named reference:0 was invoked but never defined (see thehelp page).
  57. ^Cite error: The named referenceauto1 was invoked but never defined (see thehelp page).
  58. ^"'BJP Ideological Opponent, DMK Political Adversary': Actor-Turned-Politician Vijay At TVK Rally".News18. Retrieved11 March 2025.
  59. ^"TVK passes 26 resolutions against Centre, DMK govt".hindustantimes.
  60. ^"Centre's dream of imposing a third language in T.N. will never come true: actor Vijay's TVK".The Hindu. 3 November 2024.ISSN 0971-751X. Retrieved4 November 2024.
  61. ^Tamilarasu, Prabhakar (12 November 2024)."Vijay's TVK has stirred up TN politics. Dravidian parties rush to draw youth, smaller ones wary too".ThePrint. Retrieved13 November 2024.
  62. ^"Vijay-Led TVK Announces Massive Expansion Ahead of 2026 india elictions Elections".Hindusthan Samachar. 13 February 2025. Retrieved26 May 2025.
  63. ^TNM Staff (28 April 2025)."Vijay vows corruption-free govt at TVK booth agents meet in Coimbatore".The News Minute. Retrieved26 May 2025.
  64. ^"TVK functionaries told to enrol members, bolster party from booth level".The New Indian Express. 11 May 2025. Retrieved26 May 2025.
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  68. ^"TVK rally stampede LIVE: T.N. CM Stalin visits injured persons in Karur hospital".The Hindu. 27 September 2025. Retrieved27 September 2025.
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