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Home News Updates

JNUSU Verdict 2025: Left Unity Dominates by winning all posts; ABVP, NSUI draw blank

by Editorial team
November 7, 2025
in News Updates
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JNUSU Verdict 2025: Left Unity Dominates by winning all posts; ABVP, NSUI draw blank
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Just when it seemed the Left might be dislodged from JNU’s political stronghold, it staged a resounding comeback — sweeping all posts in the November 4 elections to the Jawaharlal Nehru University Students’ Union (JNUSU). The 2025–26 polls delivered a decisive victory for the Left Unity alliance, a coalition of student groups including the All India Students’ Association (AISA) and the Students’ Federation of India (SFI).

The Left won all four central panel posts, reaffirming its long-standing dominance on the JNU campus. Aditi Mishra, representing Left Unity, was elected President with 1,861 votes, defeating Vikas Patel of the Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad (ABVP), who polled 1,447 votes — a margin of 414. Mishra’s win was historic: she became the first woman president of JNUSU since 2019.

For Vice-President, Kizhakoot Gopika Babu (Left Unity) secured 2,966 votes, comfortably beating Tanya Kumari (ABVP), who received 1,730. The post of General Secretary went to Sunil Yadav (Left Unity), who polled 1,915 votes against Rajeshwar Kant Dubey (ABVP), who garnered 1,841. Danish Ali, also from the Left panel, won the Joint Secretary post, completing the alliance’s clean sweep.

Voter turnout stood at around 67% of the 9,043 eligible students, a slight decline from about 70% in April 2025 and 73% in 2024. Observers attributed the dip to “election fatigue,” given the unusually short gap between two election cycles in the same year (April and November).

The November election followed the April 2025 JNUSU polls, where the Left had retained three out of four central posts while ABVP made a symbolic breakthrough by winning the Joint Secretary position — its first central panel seat in nearly a decade. The reversal in November, with the Left reclaiming that post, underscored both the resilience of Left politics on campus and the continued competitiveness of ABVP, which remains the principal opposition force.

Overall, the 2025 results reinforced the ideological character of JNU — a campus long associated with a strong Left tradition, yet increasingly shaped by the assertive presence of Right-wing and independent student groups. The relatively lower turnout and close margins in some contests suggest that while the Left remains dominant, student engagement and political polarisation are evolving in complex, dynamic ways.

The Left’s continued appeal appears rooted in its focus on issues such as student welfare, public education, and opposition to privatisation. Yet, the presence of multiple contenders — including the ABVP, NSUI, and BAPSA — ensures that even amid a “sweep,” the contest for JNU’s ideological heart remains very much alive.

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