Not friendly but a bitter fight lies ahead between BJP and NCP for PMC, PCMC
In this series, The Indian Express looks at what Pune citizens can expect to see in 2026. In our third part, we look at the upcoming civic polls in Pune and Pimpri Chinchwad
IN January 2026, Pune city and Pimpri-Chinchwad will witness the long-awaited civic elections. Both Pune and Pimpri-Chinchwad, which are in the campaigning phase currently, will have polling on January 15 and counting of votes on January 16.
BJP versus NCP
In both Pune and Pimpri-Chinchwad, the main rivals are NCP and BJP. Though their contest is being described as “friendly fight,” the signals emanating from both the camps indicate that a bitter fight.
After putting breaks on the soaring political strength of BJP in the Pune district by dominating in elections of local self government body, the Ajit Pawar-led NCP has a major role to play in challenging the BJP’s winning streak in PMC and PCMC elections. Both the civic bodies have been without an elected body for nearly four years. BJP had been ruling both the civic bodies before administrators were appointed.
The BJP has taken over the political reins of the city from 2014. It first snatched the Pune Lok Sabha from Congress and then won all eight Assembly seats in Pune city when every major party contested assembly polls separately.
The BJP maintained its winning momentum in 2017 civic polls as it won 97 seats of the 162 seats. Thereafter, the BJP’s strength declined a bit with party losing two seats in 2019 Assembly elections but it retained the Pune Lok Sabha seat.
Split in NCP
The NCP had come to power in Pune Municipal Corporation (PMC) in 2007 by ending the supremacy of city Congress-led by Suresh Kalmadi. The NCP front was led by Ajit Pawar and its hold on civic body continued in 2012 civic polls.
Political analyst predict that split in NCP in 2023 will have its impact on the 2026 elections of both PMC and PCMC. Ajit Pawar-led NCP and Sharad Pawar-led NCP(SP) have been at loggerheads in Pune but leaders of both the parties are advocating pre-poll alliance of both the political parties.
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In Pimpri-Chinchwad, the NCP ruled for twenty years till it was ousted by BJP in 2017. The BJP ruled from 2017 to 2022, which was affected primarily by the Covid pandemic. In 2022, the state government had appointed an administrator. In 2017 itself, NCP had suffered serious setback as several of its leaders had crossed over to BJP which then won a brute majority in PCMC.
Poaching strong contenders
The BJP, to establish its supremacy again in civic bodies, is adopting strategy adopted for Lok Sabha and Assembly elections. It has inducted several former heavyweight corporators, primarily belonging to NCP into its fold. In Pimpri-Chinchwad, NCP has done likewise, inducting three of BJP’s strong leaders.
The leaders inducted by BJP in Pune city include son of sitting legislator of NCP(SP), son of former NCP MP and daughter of former MNS legislator including a few former NCP corporators. “There are many from all the political parties willing to join the BJP. We have inducted only those popular with clean public image,” said Union minister and former city Mayor Murlidhar Mohol.
In Pimpri-Chinchwad, first NCP roped in three BJP corporators. BJP then responded by snatching 13 former NCP corporators. This includes former mayor and standing committee chiefs. BJP MLA Mahesh Landge has stated that his party has given a befitting reply to NCP.
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The NCP has warned BJP that it will get back at it, highlighting how the duel between the two is hotting up in December cold.
Polls after nine years
Both PMC and PCMC will go for polls after almost nine years with the previous elections held in 2017 while the five year term expires in 2022. Thereafter, the elections were delayed due to Covid and a plea in the Supreme Court challenging the reservation of seats.
In the PMC election, voters elect a 165-member body with 83 seats reserved for women as per the state government rule and 82 seats for general category. The corporators will be elected from 41 wards, with four from 40 electoral wards and five from one electoral ward.
A total of 35,51,469 voters registered as on July 1 are eligible to vote for the civic polls. However, the PMC administration has found around three lakh voters with double entry in the electoral roll. The electoral roll had become a controversial issue with political parties demanding for correction to ensure fair elections.
In Pimpri-Chinchwad, there are 32 panels and 128 corporators, with 64 seats reserved for women candidates. There are 10 seats for Scheduled Caste candidates and two for Scheduled Tribe candidates besides 17 are OBC seats
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The total voter count is around 17.30 lakh. Each panel will elect four candidates.
Ajay Jadhav is an Assistant Editor at The Indian Express, Pune. With over 22 years of experience in the industry, he is a highly specialized journalist whose work focuses on the intersection of urban infrastructure, governance, and sustainability.
Professional Background
Role: As Assistant Editor, he plays a key role in the editorial direction of the Pune bureau, specializing in urban policy and its direct impact on citizens.
Education: He holds a Master’s degree in Communication and Journalism from Savitribai Phule Pune University and a PG Diploma in Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR). He also studied at the prestigious Fergusson College.
Impactful Reporting: He is credited with research-based articles on conservancy staff (waste workers) that influenced national policy for better working conditions. He is also known for exposing the contrast between high-end infrastructure (like helipads for leaders) and the lack of basic amenities like schools in their home districts.
Personal Interests: An avid trekker and sports enthusiast, his personal interest in the outdoors often informs his reporting on environmental protection and sustainable development.
Recent Notable Articles (December 2025)
His reporting in late 2025 has been dominated by the upcoming January 2026 Civic Polls in Pune and Pimpri-Chinchwad, and the city's infrastructure boom:
1. Political Analysis (Civic Elections 2026)
"Not friendly but a bitter fight lies ahead between BJP and NCP for PMC, PCMC" (Dec 22, 2025): A detailed look at the intense rivalry between the Mahayuti partners as they prepare for the January 15 municipal elections.
"Pune civic polls: Big blow to NCP, NCP(SP) as leaders switch to BJP" (Dec 20, 2025): Reporting on high-profile poaching and party-hopping ahead of the elections.
"Ajit Pawar's NCP continues domination in Pune, wins 10 of 17 local bodies" (Dec 21, 2025): Analyzing the results of the local self-government body elections as a precursor to the main civic polls.
2. Infrastructure & Urban Development
"Looking Ahead at 2026: Pune to see inauguration of much-awaited Hinjewadi to Shivajinagar metro route" (Dec 22, 2025): An "outlook" piece on the critical Metro Line 3 project expected to finish by March 2026.
"Building Pune: PMC to construct double-decker bridge over Mula-Mutha River" (Dec 18, 2025): Detailing a major project aimed at easing traffic between Hadapsar and Kharadi.
"Condition of highway from Pune to Kolhapur to improve in a year: Gadkari" (Dec 4, 2025): Reporting on the Union Minister’s assurances regarding one of the state's most critical transport corridors.
3. Civic Governance & Environment
"Install sensors, LED indicators at construction sites within 15 days: PMC to builders" (Dec 16, 2025): A follow-up to the "Breathless Pune" series, reporting on new mandates for builders to monitor air quality in real-time.
"Errors in electoral rolls: PMC corrects data of 92,466 voters" (Dec 16, 2025): Tracking the administrative efforts to clean up the voter lists before the 2026 elections.
Signature Style
Ajay Jadhav is known for accountability journalism. His work often bridges the gap between high-level policy and the "ground zero" reality of Pune's residents. He is particularly focused on Sustainable Development, ensuring that as Pune grows into a "Bharat Mandapam" style destination (referring to his report on the Lohegaon project), its environmental and social safeguards remain intact.
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