2024 Odisha Legislative Assembly election
The 2024 Odisha Legislative Assembly election was held in four phases from 13 May to 1 June 2024 to elect 147 members to the 17th Odisha Vidhan Sabha, the lower house of the state legislature.[1][2] The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) achieved a majority by winning 78 seats, enabling it to form the government and marking the first time the party assumed executive power in Odisha since the state's formation in 1936.[2] This outcome ended the 24-year uninterrupted rule of the Biju Janata Dal (BJD), which secured 51 seats, a sharp decline from its 112 seats in the 2019 election.[2] The BJP's legislative party elected Mohan Charan Majhi, a four-time MLA from the Keonjhar constituency and a tribal leader, as its leader, who was sworn in as Chief Minister on 12 June 2024.[3][4] The election, conducted simultaneously with the Lok Sabha polls, reflected a significant political realignment in the state, where the BJD under Naveen Patnaik had dominated since 2000 by leveraging regional identity and welfare programs.[2] The Indian National Congress won 14 seats, while smaller parties and independents accounted for the remainder.[2]Historical and Political Context
Pre-2019 Political Landscape
Prior to 2019, Odisha's political landscape transitioned from prolonged Congress dominance to the ascendancy of regional parties emphasizing state-specific development. Following independence, the Indian National Congress governed Odisha for much of the period from 1952 through the 1970s and regained power in 1995, holding office until 2000 after defeating the Janata Dal in the 1995 assembly election. The Janata Dal, under Biju Patnaik, had previously formed the government in 1990, with Patnaik serving as chief minister from March 10, 1990, to February 15, 1995, focusing on industrial growth and infrastructure.[5][6] The formation of the Biju Janata Dal (BJD) in December 1997 by Naveen Patnaik, son of the late Biju Patnaik who died on April 17, 1997, marked a pivotal shift toward regionalism. Leveraging sympathy following the 1999 super cyclone and Biju Patnaik's legacy, the BJD contested the 2000 legislative assembly election independently after an initial alliance with the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and secured 68 of the 147 seats, allowing Naveen Patnaik to assume the chief ministership on March 5, 2000. This victory ended Congress rule and established BJD as the dominant force.[7][7][8] The BJD maintained its grip through successive elections, winning 103 seats in 2009 with 38.9% vote share and expanding to 117 seats in 2014 with 43.9%, while opposition parties struggled. Congress obtained 27 seats in 2009 (29% votes) and 16 in 2014 (26% votes), and the BJP managed 6 seats in 2009 (15.1% votes) and 10 in 2014 (18.2% votes). The BJD's sustained success stemmed from effective disaster response, welfare initiatives like poverty alleviation programs, and Naveen Patnaik's reputation for administrative efficiency and low corruption, contrasting with national parties' weaker organizational presence in the state.[9][10][10]Incumbent BJD Government's Record (2000-2024)
The Biju Janata Dal (BJD) government, led by Chief Minister Naveen Patnaik since March 2000, oversaw significant economic expansion in Odisha, with the state's Gross State Domestic Product (GSDP) growing from approximately ₹46,576 crore in 2000 to ₹8.61 lakh crore by 2024, representing an 18-fold increase.[11] This growth was driven by sectors such as mining, industry, and services, with recent annual GSDP growth rates often surpassing the national average, including 7.94% in a reported year compared to India's 7.1%.[12] Poverty levels declined markedly, from an estimated 70% of the population below the poverty line in 2000 to around 10% by 2024, as per statements from Patnaik and corroborated by broader trends in NITI Aayog's Multidimensional Poverty Index (MPI), which showed Odisha's MPI headcount ratio falling from 29.34%.[13][14][15] In disaster management, the BJD administration transformed Odisha's response capabilities following the devastating 1999 super cyclone, which killed over 10,000 people, by establishing the Odisha State Disaster Management Authority (OSDMA) in 2000 and adopting a "zero casualty" approach.[16] This model proved effective in subsequent events, such as Cyclone Fani in 2019, where evacuations and preparedness minimized fatalities despite severe impacts.[17] Infrastructure development included extensive rural road networks exceeding 70,000 km under the Pradhan Mantri Gram Sadak Yojana and initiatives like the ₹3,397 crore Ama Odisha Nabin Odisha scheme launched in 2023 for rural infrastructure.[18][19] National highway expansions and bridge constructions further supported connectivity.[18] Social indicators showed mixed progress, with Odisha's Human Development Index (HDI) improving but remaining below the national average—for instance, reaching 0.368 against India's 0.525 in one assessment—reflecting persistent gaps in education and health outcomes.[20] In education, the state climbed to fifth nationally in school education performance by 2023-24, up from 14th in 2019, per the Performance Grading Index.[21] Health equity disparities endured, particularly among tribal and rural populations, despite increased expenditures.[22] The government's tenure faced substantial criticism over corruption allegations, including mining and chit fund scams, with opponents claiming annual loot of ₹50,000 crore and systemic graft capturing administrative offices.[23][24] While Transparency International rated Odisha among India's least corrupt states in 2019, it ranked high in certain corruption perception indices during BJD rule, contributing to perceptions of governance lapses that fueled anti-incumbency in 2024.[25][25]Factors Leading to 2024 Contestation
The Biju Janata Dal (BJD), which had governed Odisha uninterrupted since 2000 under Chief Minister Naveen Patnaik, faced significant anti-incumbency after 24 years in power, contributing to its electoral reversal in 2024. Voters expressed fatigue with prolonged single-party rule, a pattern observed in other long-incumbent Indian states where governance lapses accumulate over decades, leading to demands for alternation. Specific grievances included persistent rural distress migration, with over 2 million Odia workers reportedly migrating annually for low-skill jobs despite claims of industrial growth, and inadequate infrastructure in urban areas prone to annual flooding.[26][27][28] A pivotal factor was the BJD's succession planning centered on V. Karthikeyan Pandian, a former bureaucrat of Tamil origin appointed as Patnaik's political successor in November 2023 after resigning from the Indian Administrative Service. Pandian's elevation alienated core Odia voters, who perceived it as an imposition of an "outsider" undermining local identity and merit-based leadership, especially amid Patnaik's visible health decline following multiple surgeries. The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) capitalized on this by framing the contest as a defense of "Odia asmita" (pride), linking it to cultural symbols like the Jagannath temple and historical grievances such as the unresolved missing keys to the Ratna Bhandar treasury since 2018.[29][30][26] BJP's strategic mobilization further amplified these vulnerabilities, leveraging Prime Minister Narendra Modi's eight rallies and Home Minister Amit Shah's organizational push to consolidate Hindu and tribal votes, where the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) had built grassroots networks over years. The BJD's decision to contest independently after a brief post-2019 alliance with BJP isolated it from national momentum, while allegations of corruption in public distribution system rice quality and stalled welfare schemes eroded its development narrative. These elements combined to shift voter preference toward change, with BJP's vote share surging to approximately 40% from 32.4% in 2019.[27][31][32]Electoral Framework and Logistics
Election Schedule and Phases
The Election Commission of India announced the poll schedule for the 2024 Odisha Legislative Assembly election on 16 March 2024, as part of the simultaneous general elections to the Lok Sabha.[33] The 147 constituencies were divided into four phases to facilitate logistical management, security deployment, and voter participation across the state's diverse terrain, with polling stations exceeding 40,000 in total.[34] This phased approach addressed challenges such as the state's tropical climate, remote tribal areas, and potential weather disruptions during the pre-monsoon period.[35]| Phase | Polling Date | Number of Constituencies |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | 13 May 2024 | 28 (primarily southern districts like Koraput, Kalahandi, and Berhampur)[1] [36] |
| 2 | 20 May 2024 | 35 (including central and coastal segments)[33] |
| 3 | 25 May 2024 | 42 (covering northern and eastern regions like Keonjhar and Cuttack)[37] [33] |
| 4 | 1 June 2024 | 42 (encompassing urban centers such as Bhubaneswar and Puri)[33] [38] |
Constituency Details and Voter Demographics
The Odisha Legislative Assembly comprises 147 single-member constituencies, delimited under the Delimitation of Parliamentary and Assembly Constituencies Order of 2008, based on the 2001 census, covering the state's 30 districts.[39] Of these, 33 are reserved for Scheduled Tribes (ST), 24 for Scheduled Castes (SC), and 90 are unreserved (general).[39] This reservation structure reflects Odisha's demographic composition, with STs comprising about 22.8% and SCs about 17.1% of the population per the 2011 census, necessitating proportional safeguards for representation in tribal and disadvantaged areas.[39] As per the final electoral roll published by the Chief Electoral Officer of Odisha on January 6, 2024, the state had 33,236,360 registered electors eligible to vote in the 2024 assembly election.[40] [41] This represented an increase of over 500,000 voters from previous rolls, driven by additions from young adults and revisions.[40] The gender breakdown showed 16,850,949 males (50.7%), 16,382,031 females (49.3%), and 3,380 third-gender electors, yielding an elector gender ratio of 972 females per 1,000 males.[40] [41]| Demographic Category | Number of Electors | Percentage |
|---|---|---|
| Males | 16,850,949 | 50.7% |
| Females | 16,382,031 | 49.3% |
| Third Gender | 3,380 | 0.01% |
| Total | 33,236,360 | 100% |
Administrative and Security Measures
The Election Commission of India (ECI) enforced the Model Code of Conduct across Odisha starting March 16, 2024, to regulate campaign activities, government actions, and media coverage, with a compendium of guidelines issued for compliance by officials and parties.[43] To ensure impartial administration, the ECI ordered transfers of non-Indian Administrative Service district magistrates and superintendents of police in key districts prior to polling.[44] The election spanned four phases on May 13, May 20, May 25, and June 1, 2024, covering all 147 constituencies, with electronic voting machines (EVMs) paired with Voter Verifiable Paper Audit Trails (VVPATs) used at polling stations for vote recording and verification.[1] Polling logistics included randomization of EVMs and deployment of polling personnel, with arrangements for dispersal centers to manage staff movement and materials securely.[45] For the second phase alone, 9,162 polling stations were established, serviced by over 33,000 personnel.[46] ECI-appointed general, police, and expenditure observers monitored processes, while the cVIGIL app facilitated real-time reporting of violations. Sensitive booths, including 537 affected by left-wing extremism in the first phase, received enhanced scrutiny and facilities like extended polling hours where needed. Security entailed multi-layered deployments of Central Armed Police Forces (CAPF), Odisha Armed Police (OAP), and civil police to prevent booth capturing, violence, and intimidation. In the third phase, 35,000 personnel—including 121 CAPF companies and 106 OAP platoons—secured polling sites.[47] The final phase saw 36,000 deployed, comprising 126 CAPF companies, 86 OAP platoons, and 20,500 civil police, amid concerns over pre-poll clashes.[48] Counting centers on June 4, 2024, featured three-tier security with CAPF guarding strong rooms equipped with CCTV surveillance and round-the-clock access controls.[49] These measures contributed to largely peaceful voting, though isolated incidents prompted swift interventions.Parties, Candidates, and Campaigns
Major Contesting Parties and Alliances
The 2024 Odisha Legislative Assembly election featured a direct contest among the major parties without formal pre-poll alliances, distinguishing it from coalition-heavy dynamics in other states. The incumbent Biju Janata Dal (BJD), Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), and Indian National Congress (INC) each fielded candidates across the majority of the 147 constituencies, with negotiations for a potential BJD-BJP tie-up collapsing over seat-sharing disputes in March 2024.[50] [51] This independent contest reflected Odisha's regional political fragmentation, where the BJD's long-standing dominance faced challenges from national parties unallied locally.[52] The BJD, a state-specific party with its conch shell symbol, positioned itself as the continuity option under Naveen Patnaik's leadership, contesting all seats to defend its incumbency since 2000. The BJP, operating solo despite its national National Democratic Alliance (NDA) affiliations, targeted anti-incumbency against the BJD by nominating candidates in all constituencies and emphasizing governance critiques. The INC, aligned nationally with the INDIA bloc but without local partners, also contested broadly, focusing on reviving its diminished state presence through widespread nominations. Minor participants included the Communist Party of India (Marxist) (CPI(M)) and various independents, though they mounted limited campaigns.[2]Key Candidates and Nominations
The Biju Janata Dal (BJD) began announcing its candidates for the 147 assembly seats in late March 2024, starting with a list of 54 candidates on March 27, followed by additional lists in early April, including 27 more on April 3.[53][54] A notable aspect of BJD's nominations was incumbent Chief Minister Naveen Patnaik contesting from two constituencies: his long-held stronghold of Hinjili in Ganjam district and the newly added Kantabanji in Balangir district, announced on April 17, aiming to strengthen the party's presence in western Odisha where it had faced challenges.[55] The party largely renominated its sitting MLAs, reflecting confidence in its incumbency despite anti-incumbency sentiments. The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) released its first list of assembly candidates on April 2, 2024, covering multiple phases, with subsequent announcements including for the upper phases on April 15.[56][57] Key nominations included tribal leader Mohan Charan Majhi, a four-time MLA, from the Keonjhar (ST) reserved constituency, positioning the party to appeal to tribal voters in mineral-rich northern Odisha.[58] BJP's strategy emphasized fielding local leaders and defectors from BJD, such as in high-profile seats, to capitalize on perceived governance fatigue under the long-ruling BJD. The Indian National Congress (INC) also finalized its candidates around the same period, announcing lists in early April, focusing on revitalizing its base in coastal and southern districts but without a singular prominent face comparable to Patnaik or Majhi.[56] Nominations across parties were filed with the Election Commission of India between early May and mid-May 2024, ahead of the multi-phase polling, with affidavits disclosing assets and criminal records scrutinized for validity. Overall, the process saw over 1,000 candidates in fray initially, though major parties dominated with BJD and BJP fielding nearly complete slates.[59]Campaign Strategies and Prominent Issues
The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) pursued an aggressive campaign strategy centered on anti-incumbency against the Biju Janata Dal (BJD)'s 24-year rule, leveraging Prime Minister Narendra Modi's rallies and national infrastructure promises to appeal to voters seeking change. The party blended Hindu cultural sentiments—particularly devotion to Lord Jagannath—with regional Odia pride, positioning itself as a counter to perceived BJD complacency, while targeting women voters through pledges like the Subhadra Yojana for financial assistance.[60][27][61] BJP organizers emphasized grassroots mobilization in western Odisha, a migrant labor hub, where dissatisfaction with job scarcity and underdevelopment fueled support for central government integration.[62] In contrast, the BJD strategy relied on defending Chief Minister Naveen Patnaik's legacy of welfare schemes, such as the Biju Swasthya Kalyan Yojana for healthcare access, and organizational strength, with heavy spending exceeding ₹415 crore on propaganda and candidate support. However, the party's elevation of former bureaucrat V. K. Pandian as a potential successor drew internal backlash and voter skepticism, undermining claims of seamless continuity amid perceptions of governance fatigue and cadre alienation.[27][63][64] The Indian National Congress adopted a subdued approach, attempting to replicate gains in southern Odisha by criticizing both rivals on unemployment and inequality, while alleging tacit BJP-BJD understandings, though its weak organizational base limited impact to sporadic attacks on incumbent failures.[65] Prominent issues revolved around anti-incumbency and leadership transition, with BJP framing BJD's prolonged tenure as stagnant despite welfare gains, contrasted against promises of accelerated growth via Modi's vision. Voter concerns in tribal and coastal belts included migration-driven economic distress, inadequate infrastructure, and demands for better integration of state resources with central initiatives, amplifying calls for accountability on law and order.[31][62][66] Cultural identity, including temple management and Odia self-respect, emerged as flashpoints, with BJP accusing BJD of neglecting heritage sites like Puri's Jagannath Temple.[60]Pre-Election Assessments
Opinion Polls and Surveys
Internal party surveys indicated a potential surge for the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) in the 2024 Odisha Legislative Assembly election. Reports from BJP insiders revealed that multiple pre-poll assessments projected the party to win 75-80 seats out of 147, influencing the BJP's strategy to push for more assembly seats in alliance talks with the incumbent Biju Janata Dal (BJD), which ultimately collapsed.[67] BJP national president Amit Shah echoed these findings during a campaign rally on May 17, 2024, predicting 75 assembly seats for the party alongside 15 Lok Sabha seats, attributing the projected gains to growing dissatisfaction with BJD's governance.[68] Publicly reported pre-poll surveys were scarce and often focused more on concurrent Lok Sabha contests, with projections varying widely and reflecting partisan claims rather than consensus. A February 2024 survey attributed to The Federal forecasted a dominant BJP performance with 54.9% vote share against BJD's 19.45%, though specific assembly seat breakdowns were not detailed.[69] Other outlets like India Today and Times Now cited closer races, with BJD projected to hold a slight edge in some estimates, while Janhit Times favored BJD with 18 seats to BJP's 2; these discrepancies highlighted methodological differences and potential biases in sample selection or timing, as independent verification was limited.[69]Expert Analyses and Predictions
Political analysts characterized the 2024 Odisha Legislative Assembly election as a fiercely contested bipolar race between the ruling Biju Janata Dal (BJD) and the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), with the Congress relegated to a marginal role. Experts emphasized anti-incumbency after Naveen Patnaik's 24-year tenure, compounded by perceptions of governance fatigue and the controversial elevation of V.K. Pandian, a former bureaucrat of Tamil origin, as Patnaik's political heir apparent. This move, analysts argued, alienated local Odia sentiment by fueling narratives of external influence over state affairs, potentially eroding BJD's ethnic and regional pride-based support in rural and tribal belts.[70][71][51] BJP's strategy, including Prime Minister Narendra Modi's multiple rallies and promises of a "double-engine" government, was viewed by observers as effectively exploiting these vulnerabilities, alongside targeted attacks on alleged corruption and migration issues under BJD rule. Pre-poll assessments from party insiders and commentators forecasted BJP gains in coastal and western Odisha districts, where welfare schemes like Subhadra Yojana appealed to women voters, traditionally a BJD stronghold. However, BJD's robust cadre network and Patnaik's enduring personal popularity were predicted to sustain a narrow edge in urban and southern pockets, potentially leading to a hung assembly or post-poll maneuvers.[72][73][74] Qualitative forecasts diverged on outcomes, with some experts cautioning that BJD's organizational depth could defy national BJP momentum, while others highlighted the absence of a pre-poll alliance—broken in March 2024—as tilting scales toward fragmentation of anti-BJD votes. Regional analysts predicted volatility in 40-50 marginal seats, where caste dynamics among Other Backward Classes and Scheduled Tribes could prove decisive, underscoring the election's high-stakes nature without a clear frontrunner.[75][76]Election Results and Analysis
Overall Seat and Vote Outcomes
The 2024 Odisha Legislative Assembly election, conducted in four phases from 13 May to 1 June with results declared on 4 June, resulted in the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) winning 78 of the 147 seats, securing a simple majority to form the government and ending the Biju Janata Dal's (BJD) 24-year rule.[2] The BJD secured 51 seats, the Indian National Congress (INC) 14 seats, the Communist Party of India (Marxist) [CPI(M)] 1 seat, and independents 3 seats.[2] Despite the BJP's seat advantage, the BJD polled a marginally higher vote share of 40.22% compared to the BJP's 40.07%, highlighting the impact of vote distribution under the first-past-the-post system, where the BJP's votes were more efficiently concentrated in winnable constituencies.[77] The INC received 13.26% of the votes.[77] The following table summarizes the outcomes for major parties:| Party | Seats Won | Vote Share (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) | 78 | 40.07 |
| Biju Janata Dal (BJD) | 51 | 40.22 |
| Indian National Congress (INC) | 14 | 13.26 |
| Communist Party of India (Marxist) [CPI(M)] | 1 | - |
| Independents | 3 | - |
Performance by Party and Swing Analysis
The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) achieved a decisive victory by winning 78 of the 147 seats in the Odisha Legislative Assembly, surpassing the majority mark of 74 and displacing the long-ruling Biju Janata Dal (BJD).[2] This represented a net gain of 55 seats compared to its 23 seats in the 2019 election.[78] The BJD, which had dominated with 112 seats in 2019, was reduced to 51 seats, suffering a net loss of 61.[2] [78] The Indian National Congress (INC) recorded a modest improvement, securing 14 seats against 9 in 2019, while the Communist Party of India (Marxist) retained its single seat and independents won 3.[2] [78] Despite the BJD polling a marginally higher number of total votes than the BJP—approximately 40.2% to 40.1% based on constituency-level aggregates—the BJP's more efficient distribution of votes across constituencies under the first-past-the-post system translated into a disproportionate seat advantage.[79] [80] This outcome highlighted the electoral system's tendency to amplify gains for parties with concentrated support in marginal seats, contributing to the BJD's overperformance in raw votes but underperformance in seats relative to 2019, when it held about 43% vote share.[81] The INC's vote share fell to around 13-14%, reflecting a consolidation of anti-BJD votes toward the BJP rather than the opposition.[79]| Party | 2019 Seats | 2024 Seats | Seat Swing |
|---|---|---|---|
| BJP | 23 | 78 | +55 |
| BJD | 112 | 51 | -61 |
| INC | 9 | 14 | +5 |
| CPI(M) | 1 | 1 | 0 |
| IND | 1 | 3 | +2 |
Regional and District-Wise Breakdowns
The 2024 Odisha Legislative Assembly election exhibited pronounced regional variations in party performance, with the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) consolidating gains in western and coastal districts, while the Indian National Congress (INC) achieved breakthroughs in southern tribal areas. The Biju Janata Dal (BJD), despite securing a higher statewide vote share of 40.22% compared to the BJP's 40.07%, won fewer seats due to suboptimal vote efficiency, including complete shutouts in several districts.[79] In tribal-dominated southern districts such as Rayagada and Koraput, the INC capitalized on local sentiments, capturing all three assembly seats in Rayagada and three of five in Koraput. The BJD drew blanks across Rayagada, Koraput, and neighboring Malkangiri, reflecting erosion of support in these regions after prolonged governance. The BJP also failed to secure seats in Rayagada, underscoring competitive dynamics in southern Odisha's plateau areas.[79][82] Northern and western districts, including Mayurbhanj, Jharsuguda, Dhenkanal, and Boudh, saw the BJD shut out entirely, with the BJP dominating in resource-rich western zones like Jharsuguda and emerging victorious in 78 seats overall through targeted mobilization. The BJP's inability to win in districts like Deogarh, Nuapada, and Gajapati highlighted pockets of resistance, often tied to regional strongholds or alliances.[79] Coastal districts provided mixed outcomes, where the BJP overturned BJD incumbencies in areas like Balasore and Bhadrak, but the BJD retained influence in pockets with narrow margins below 10,000 votes in 45 contests favoring the BJP. This distribution pattern—BJP's concentrated wins versus BJD's dispersed vote base—underpinned the seat-vote discrepancy.[79]Demographic Influences on Voting Patterns
In Odisha, where Scheduled Tribes (STs) constitute approximately 22.8% and Scheduled Castes (SCs) 16.5% of the population, voting patterns in the 2024 assembly election reflected a significant shift away from the incumbent Biju Janata Dal (BJD), which had long dominated these groups through welfare schemes and regional identity appeals. The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) captured 18 of 33 ST-reserved seats and 14 of 24 SC-reserved seats, wresting 9 each from the BJD, compared to its 2019 performance where it held fewer in these categories. This breach of the BJD's traditional Dalit-tribal vote bank, representing about 40% of the electorate, was attributed to the BJP's targeted outreach combining Hindutva messaging with promises of development and representation, culminating in the appointment of tribal leader Mohan Charan Majhi as chief minister and inclusion of 4 tribal and 2 Dalit ministers in the cabinet.[83] Gender dynamics played a pivotal role, with women—traditionally a core BJD constituency due to initiatives like the Mission Shakti program—appearing to favor the BJP amid anti-incumbency. Female voter turnout reached 75.55%, surpassing male turnout of 73.37%, in a state where women comprise nearly half of the 33.6 million electorate. Analysts cited the BJP's intensive campaigning, including Prime Minister Narendra Modi's rallies and pledges such as the Subhadra Yojana for financial assistance to women, alongside perceptions of BJD fatigue after 24 years in power, as factors eroding the incumbent's edge among this group.[84] Rural-urban divides, though less pronounced in the largely agrarian state (83% rural population), underscored the BJP's broader appeal in interior and tribal-dominated rural belts, where it secured gains against the BJD's coastal strongholds. The BJP's vote share rose by about 8 percentage points to around 40%, driven by rural discontent over migration, unemployment, and perceived neglect despite BJD welfare, while urban centers like Bhubaneswar showed mixed but ultimately pro-change sentiments aligned with national trends favoring incumbency challenges. OBC communities, forming a substantial but fragmented bloc, contributed to the BJP's momentum through pre-election outreach emphasizing central government schemes, though specific vote splits remain less documented amid the party's overall consolidation of non-upper-caste support.[83]Post-Election Developments
Government Formation Process
The 2024 Odisha Legislative Assembly election results, declared on 4 June 2024, saw the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) win 78 seats in the 147-member house, securing a simple majority as 74 seats are required to form the government.[2][85] The Biju Janata Dal (BJD), which had governed for 24 years, was reduced to 51 seats, falling short of the threshold.[2] On 6 June 2024, Odisha's Chief Electoral Officer formally notified Governor Raghubar Das of the election outcome, enabling the constitutional process for government formation to commence.[86] The BJP, as the single largest party with a clear majority, staked its claim to form the government shortly thereafter, submitting letters of support from its legislators to the Raj Bhavan.[87] In a legislature party meeting held on 11 June 2024, BJP MLAs unanimously elected tribal leader and four-time MLA Mohan Charan Majhi as their leader, positioning him to become Chief Minister.[88][89] Governor Raghubar Das invited Majhi to form the government, and the swearing-in ceremony occurred on 12 June 2024 at Janata Maidan in Bhubaneswar.[87][90] Majhi took oath as the 15th Chief Minister of Odisha, administered by the Governor, alongside two Deputy Chief Ministers: Pravati Parida and Suresh Pujari.[91][92] The event, attended by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Union Home Minister Amit Shah, and other senior BJP leaders, marked the first instance of a BJP-led administration in the state.[87][88] No post-poll alliances were required, as the BJP's outright majority streamlined the transition without legal or procedural disputes.[85]