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Bangladesh

Post-Mortem of a Defeat: Why the BNP Faltered in the Jessore Stronghold

Khabor Wala Desk

Published: 15th February 2026, 12:20 AM

Post-Mortem of a Defeat: Why the BNP Faltered in the Jessore Stronghold

While the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) celebrated a landslide victory across much of the nation in the 13th National Parliamentary Election, the district of Jessore presented a startlingly different narrative. Of the six parliamentary seats in the region, the BNP suffered heavy defeats in five, leaving party activists in a state of sombre introspection. Conversely, Bangladesh Jamaat-e-Islami has emerged as the dominant force in the district, sweeping five seats with significant margins.

Political analysts have identified a “triad of failure” that contributed to this electoral upset: erratic candidate substitution, internal sabotage by snubbed leaders, and an inability to counter Jamaat’s religious outreach among female voters.

The Statistical Reality: Jessore Election Results 2026

The following table details the unofficial results across the six constituencies, illustrating the scale of the BNP’s struggle against Jamaat-e-Islami.

Constituency Winning Candidate (Party) Votes Runner-up (Party) Votes Margin
Jessore-1 Azizur Rahman (Jamaat) 119,093 Nuruজ্জামান Liton (BNP) 93,542 25,551
Jessore-2 Mosleh Uddin Farid (Jamaat) 180,965 Sabira Sultana (BNP) 146,647 34,318
Jessore-3 Anindya Islam Amit (BNP) 201,339 Abdul Kader (Jamaat) 187,463 13,876
Jessore-4 Golam Rasul (Jamaat) 176,912 Motiar Rahman Farazi (BNP) 131,917 44,995
Jessore-5 Gazi Enamul Haque (Jamaat) 132,876 Shahid Iqbal (Ind/Rebel) 85,045 47,831
Jessore-6 Mukhtar Ali (Jamaat) 91,018 Abul Hossain Azad (BNP) 79,321 11,697

Three Pillars of the BNP’s Collapse

1. The Perils of ‘Last-Minute’ Substitutions

The most glaring strategic error was the party’s decision to replace popular primary nominees with new faces just weeks before the polls. In Jessore-1 (Sharsha), the removal of Mofiqul Hasan in favour of Nuruজ্জামান Liton sparked a revolt. Similarly, in Jessore-6 (Keshabpur), the popular former Chhatra Dal President Kazi Rawnakul Islam Srabon was dropped for Abul Hossain Azad. Analysts suggest that Srabon’s family ties to local Awami League figures might have pulled moderate crossover votes that the substitute candidate could not reach.

2. Internal Sabotage and Lack of Coordination

In nearly every losing seat, those denied the party ticket either remained inactive or, more damagingly, allegedly instructed their followers to support Jamaat candidates to spite the BNP’s official choice. In Jessore-4, the disqualification of the popular T.S. Ayub due to loan defaults led his supporters to cast their ballots for the “Scales” (Jamaat) rather than the “Sheaf of Paddy.” In Jessore-5, a three-way split between the official BNP-allied candidate and a party rebel (Shahid Iqbal) effectively handed the seat to Jamaat on a silver platter.

3. The ‘Silent’ Female Vote

A significant factor noted by Sabira Sultana’s campaign in Jessore-2 was the overwhelming turnout of female voters. Jamaat-e-Islami’s grassroots religious campaigning, which utilised a moral and religious narrative, resonated deeply with rural women. The BNP failed to provide a compelling alternative social or political counter-narrative, leaving a vast demographic untapped or actively hostile to their platform.

A Sole Bright Spot

The only glimmer of hope for the BNP was Jessore-3 (Sardar), where Anindya Islam Amit secured a hard-fought victory. Observers attribute this success to a lack of internal strife and Amit’s longstanding visibility in the community, proving that where the BNP remained united, it remained competitive.

Delwar Hossain, General Secretary of Jessore District BNP, admitted the need for a deep internal review. “While the party won nationally, the Jessore results are a wake-up call regarding discipline and our engagement with female voters,” he remarked.

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