BJP's Datia gamble: Why the bypoll is under spotlight
The battle for Datia has turned into far more than a bypoll. It has become the BJP's biggest political gamble in Madhya Pradesh, one that
The battle for Datia has turned into far more than a bypoll. It has become the BJP's biggest political gamble in Madhya Pradesh, one that has shaken the party's traditional power structure and sparked a fierce debate over leadership, loyalty and the future of the Gwalior-Chambal region. In a move that stunned political circles, the BJP denied a ticket to former Madhya Pradesh Home Minister Dr. Narottam Mishra, one of its most influential faces, and instead placed its trust in Ashutosh Tiwari. Read Full Story The decision has transformed Datia into the state's most high-profile political battlefield, with questions swirling over whether the party is scripting a new political era or taking its biggest electoral risk. For nearly 15 years, Datia was synonymous with Narottam Mishra. After the 2008 delimitation reserved the Dabra Assembly seat for Scheduled Castes, Mishra shifted to Datia and went on to win three consecutive Assembly elections in 2008, 2013 and 2018.
As Home Minister in the Shivraj Singh Chouhan government, he emerged as one of the BJP's most powerful leaders. But the 2023 Assembly election changed the narrative when he suffered a shock defeat to Congress candidate Rajendra Bharti. When Bharti's Assembly membership was terminated, triggering a bypoll, political observers almost unanimously expected the BJP to once again bank on Mishra. Instead, the party sprang a surprise by naming Ashutosh Tiwari, sending shockwaves through the state's political landscape. The BJP has not officially explained why Mishra was dropped. However, political discussions and party sources have cited several possible reasons, including the impact of the 2023 defeat, local anti-incumbency, organisational feedback, dissatisfaction among workers and an attempt to reshape caste equations. None of these reasons has been officially confirmed by the party. The decision has already exposed signs of unrest within the BJP. Supporters of Mishra took to the streets, blocked the Jhansi-Gwalior highway and reports of resignations by local office-bearers surfaced, highlighting the challenge before the party in keeping its cadre united behind the new candidate.
VIDEO | Madhya Pradesh: Heavy police has been deployed after BJP workers protest over former Madhya Pradesh minister Narottam Mishra being denied a ticket by the BJP for the Datia Assembly bypoll. Swapnil Wankhade, District Magistrate of Datia, says, "There was an 11.5-12-hour pic.twitter.com/orufXB5yiHโ Press Trust of India (@PTI_News) July 11, 2026 For the BJP, the Datia bypoll is not just about winning one Assembly seat. It is also about proving that electoral success, organisational strategy and local acceptance now outweigh political stature. Ashutosh Tiwari's candidature is widely being viewed as part of a broader effort to prepare a new leadership team and strengthen the party's social engineering ahead of the 2028 Assembly elections. The stakes are equally high because Datia's electoral arithmetic is complex. With nearly 2.4 lakh voters, including significant numbers of Scheduled Castes, Brahmins, Kushwahas, Yadavs, Thakurs, Vaishyas and other OBC communities, every social bloc could influence the final outcome.
