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What was conceptualised as a unified electoral force is degenerating into regional fragments, leaving the opposition’s national ambitions highly compromised

Congress president Mallikarjun Kharge and party leaders Rahul Gandhi, Jairam Ramesh and KC Venugopal, Shiv Sena (UBT) leader Sanjay Raut, NCP (SP) leader Supriya Sule, AAP leader Sanjay Singh, RJD leader Tejashwi Yadav, DMK leader TR Baalu and others during an INDIA bloc meeting. (File pic: PTI)
The structural stability of the opposition Indian National Developmental Inclusive Alliance (INDIA) bloc is facing its most severe existential crisis since its inception. A series of coordinated political exits, deep internal rifts, and public fractures among core regional heavyweights have raised fundamental questions about the alliance’s long-term survival. With the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK) expressing deep dissatisfaction in Tamil Nadu, an outright split within the Trinamool Congress (TMC) in West Bengal, and the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) officially walking away from central seat-sharing arrangements, the pan-India anti-incumbency front appears to be rapidly unravelling. What was conceptualised as a unified electoral force is degenerating into regional fragments, leaving the opposition’s national ambitions highly compromised.
The Tamil Nadu Friction and DMK’s Discontent
In southern India, where the opposition alliance previously enjoyed maximum ideological cohesion, severe cracks have emerged between the DMK and the central leadership of the Indian National Congress. This friction is set to cast a shadow over an upcoming meeting of INDIA bloc leaders scheduled for June 8 in the national capital. While around 17 opposition parties are expected to participate in the gathering to project a unified front and discuss strategy both inside and outside Parliament, the high-profile meeting is likely to proceed without the DMK. Relations between the two partners have deteriorated so significantly following the Congress joining Vijay’s TVK-led government in Tamil Nadu that the DMK has formally requested a separate seating block in the Lok Sabha, away from its former ally. Sources indicate that this seating proposal has more or less been approved and is currently awaiting a final decision from Lok Sabha Speaker Om Birla, underscoring a deep and visible parliamentary estrangement.
The Bengal Cataclysm and the Trinamool Split
A devastating blow to the alliance has also materialised in West Bengal, where the Trinamool Congress has suffered a formal internal split following an assembly election defeat to the BJP. A powerful faction within the party seems to have seized the main opposition space. This internal rebellion has effectively shattered the possibility of a unified anti-BJP front in Bengal. Facing an existential crisis, TMC chairperson Mamata Banerjee and general secretary Abhishek Banerjee are likely to attend the INDIA bloc meeting on June 8.
AAP’s Official Exit and the Collapse of the Northern Front
Simultaneously, the Aam Aadmi Party seems to have definitively detached itself from the INDIA bloc’s joint operational framework. Relations between AAP and the Congress had been deteriorating due to continuous friction over administrative jurisdictions in Delhi and conflicting state-level strategies in Punjab. By officially exiting the alliance, AAP has chosen to fiercely protect its independent political footprint rather than compromise its regional governance narrative for a fragile national consensus. This departure completely hollows out the opposition’s viability across crucial northern states and urban constituencies.
The Structural Deficit of a Leaderless Coalition
Ultimately, the rapid disintegration of the INDIA bloc stems from a fundamental structural flaw: the absence of a singular, universally accepted leader and a cohesive ideological glue. In the absence of a binding national narrative, individual party ambitions have taken precedence over collective goals. Regional satraps are unwilling to sacrifice their hard-won local dominance to salvage a weakened central Congress apparatus. As regional allies either walk away, boycott joint strategy sessions, or actively rebel against the central committee, the INDIA bloc increasingly resembles a temporary electoral arrangement rather than a sustainable political alternative, pushing the national opposition into a state of acute strategic paralysis.
About the Author
Pathikrit Sen Gupta is a Senior Associate Editor with News18.com and likes to cut a long story short. He writes sporadically on Politics, Sports, Global Affairs, Space, Entertainment, And Food. He tra…Read More
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