After a sweeping win in Kerala, the Indian National Congress faces a fierce leadership contest for Chief Minister, with K. C. Venugopal’s entry intensifying internal power struggles and high-command involvement
Published Date – 5 May 2026, 05:13 PM
Thiruvananthapuram: After a big win in the Assembly elections and trouncing the Left Front, the Congress party finds itself in the midst of an open contest for the top post, turning a predictable transition into a high-stakes race. In earlier decades, the question of leadership rarely invited prolonged uncertainty.
When stalwarts like K. Karunakaran, A.K. Antony and Oommen Chandy rose to the Chief Minister’s office, the path was largely clear. Karunakaran went on to hold the post four times, Antony thrice, and Chandy twice; each transition was marked more by consensus than contest. That template now appears to have shifted.
The Congress party’s emphatic return to power after a decade in the opposition has triggered an intense internal churn, with multiple power centres asserting their claim.
What would ordinarily have been a moment of unalloyed celebration has, instead, opened up a complex negotiation over leadership, reflecting both the depth of the party’s bench strength and the competing ambitions within.
At the heart of the current flux is the unexpected entry of K.C. Venugopal into the fray. A trusted national-level organiser and a key figure in the party’s central leadership, his name gaining traction has raised eyebrows within the state unit.
His candidature introduces a new dynamic, one that goes beyond the traditional state leadership contest and brings the weight of the high command more directly into play. The coming days will be crucial.
A meeting in New Delhi, led by the central leadership on Tuesday, is expected to chart the next steps, including the appointment of observers who will travel to Kerala. Their task will be to gauge the mood among the 63 Congress legislators and to hold consultations with allies, whose support remains vital in shaping a stable government.
Unlike in the past, when leadership choices were often settled through quiet consultations, this time the process is unfolding in full public view. Camps are forming, signals are being sent, and the balancing act between seniority, acceptability and political arithmetic is becoming increasingly intricate.
For the Congress, the challenge lies not just in choosing a Chief Minister, but in ensuring that the decision strengthens rather than strains the coalition it leads. In a state where political perception can shift quickly, how the party manages this rare rat race could well define the tone of its return to power.
