2026 Bangladeshi general election
12 February 2026
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300 of the 350 seats in the Jatiya Sangsad 151 seats needed for a majority | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| Registered | 127,695,183 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Constituency map | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| This article is part of a series on the |
| Politics of Bangladesh |
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The general election is scheduled to be held in Bangladesh on 12 February 2026 to elect members of the Jatiya Sangsad.[1] This election will determine the next Government of Bangladesh. The vote will take place under the Interim government led by Muhammad Yunus, which has governed the country since August 2024. A constitutional referendum on the July Charter will be held alongside the election.
Major parties are expected to contest, however, the Awami League, the winner of previous four elections, is currently suspended and is highly expected to not participate in the election.[2] The election witnessed a significant increase of the number of female candidates, particularly from the National Citizen Party (NCP) and the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP).[3]
Background
The Awami League won the 2024 general elections following a record low voter turnout and a controversial election. In spite of this, they formed a government.[4] The United States Department of State stated that the election was not free and fair[5] and the United Kingdom's Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office termed the election lacking the preconditions of democracy.[6] According to The Economist, through this election, "Bangladesh effectively became a one-party state".[7]
The main opposition party, the Bangladesh Nationalist Party, demanded that the government hand over power to a neutral caretaker government before the January 2024 elections.[8] This was rejected by Hasina, who vowed that "Bangladesh will never allow an unelected government again".[9] Hasina's resistance to a caretaker government arose following the 2006–2008 political crisis, during which a caretaker government assumed military-backed control of the country and arrested a number of political leaders, including Hasina and the former Prime Minister Khaleda Zia.[10] Khaleda Zia was sentenced to prison for five years on 8 February 2018, for her involvement in the Zia Orphanage corruption case.[11] The sentence was then modified to 10 years.[12] Zia's successor as chair of the party, her son Tarique Rahman, was also found guilty of criminal conspiracy and multiple counts of murder for a grenade attack in 2004 that injured Hasina and killed 24 people.[13] He was sentenced to life in prison. As such, he was barred from running for office.[14]
In June 2024, 2024 Bangladesh quota reform movement erupted throughout the country, demanding the reform of quotas in government jobs. The protests were met with brutal crackdown by law-enforcement agencies and paramilitary forces, resulting in the July massacre. By August, the protests intensified into large-scale Non-cooperation movement against the government which eventually culminated in Resignation of Sheikh Hasina on 5 August. The following day, the 12th Jatiya Sangsad was dissolved by President Mohammed Shahabuddin.[15] Khaleda Zia was released by the President of Bangladesh following Hasina's resignation.[16]
Following negotiations between student leaders and the Bangladesh Armed Forces, Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus was appointed as the Chief Adviser of Bangladesh to lead an interim government with a view of leading the country to new elections.[17] The student leaders of the protest movement have also formed political groups like National Citizen Party and are assumed to participate in the election.
Over time, serious disagreements have arisen over participation of the Awami League in the polls. BNP leader Ruhul Kabir Rizvi & Jatiya Party (Ershad) leader GM Quader supported the participation of Awami League in the polls. Bangladesh Army chief Waker-Uz-Zaman had reportedly stated that the participation of a 'refined' Awami League led by leaders with 'clean' image like Shirin Sharmin Chaudhury, Sheikh Fazle Noor Taposh & Saber Hossain Chowdhury is necessary to ensure that the elections are 'free, fair & inclusive'.[18] However, Students Against Discrimination placed within the interim government like Mahfuj Alam bitterly opposed the participation of the Awami League in the polls.[19] NCP leader Nahid Islam also voiced his opposition to participation of the Awami League in the polls, unless its leaders are put on trial for the July massacre. He stated that any attempt to relaunch the so-called refined Awami League in the elections amounts to foreign interference.[20] Bangladesh Jamaat-e-Islami Ameer Shafiqur Rahman has also expressed his dissent against allowing the Awami League to participate in the polls.[18]
A petition demanding a ban on the Awami League & its associates of the Grand Alliance filed by the student agitators[21] had been turned down by the Appellate Division.[22] On 9 April 2025, The NCP, Jamaat-e-Islami & other Islamist organisations like the Hefazat-e-Islam Bangladesh staged a 2025 Shahbag protest in front of the Jamuna State Guest House, the residence of the Chief Adviser, demanding a ban on the Awami League.[23] On the following day, the interim government banned Awami League and all of its activities in cyberspace and elsewhere, under the Anti-Terrorism Act, 2009. The ban would last until the International Crimes Tribunal completes the trial of the party and its leaders.[24][25] On 17 November 2025, the International Crimes Tribunal ruled that Hasina and her co-defendants were guilty of war crimes and sentenced her along with former home minister Asaduzzaman Khan Kamal to death.[26]
A writ petition was filed on 3 December 2025 at the Supreme Court of Bangladesh by advocate Yarul Islam, the leader of the Bangladesh Congress, that challenged the legality of the appointment of the secretary of the Election Commission, the returning officers and the assistant returning officers from the executive branch, which the petitioner claimed to contradict the constitution, and requested the issuance of a rule on the formation of an "Electoral Service Commission" to appoint these officials. Notably, the writ also sought a stay order on the preparation and organization of the upcoming election.[27]
Electoral system
The 350 members of the Jatiya Sangsad consist of 300 directly elected seats using first-past-the-post voting (FPTP) in single-member constituencies, and an additional 50 seats reserved for women. The reserved seats are elected proportionally by the elected members. Each parliament sits for a five-year term.[28]
The interim government introduced reforms before the election, including reintroduction of "no vote" for the single candidate constituencies.[29] It would be the first general election in Bangladesh where expatriates can vote.[30]
Voters
According to the final voter list published by the Election Commission of Bangladesh, 127,695,183 people are eligible to vote in the election, 64,814,907 among whom are male, 62,879,042 are female, and 1,234 are third gender voters. The growth rate of the male voters was 2.29%, and the female voters was 4.16%.[31]
Campaign
Major campaign issues
Unemployment
Unemployment has been a major problem for the Bangladeshi economy, especially affecting the youth. According to a Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics report, Bangladesh's overall youth unemployment rate stood at 4.48% in 2024, which was 4.15% in 2023.[32][33] In 2024, 87% of the unemployeds were educated, and 21% of them were graduates, showing the lack of job growth needed to accommodate the increasing workforce.[34] A 2024 study found that 55% of the Bangladeshi youth wished to leave the country due to the rising unemployment rate.[35] Unemployment was one of the core factor behind the July Revolution of 2024.[36]
In the electoral campaign, the BNP promised to create 1 crore new employment.[37]
Corruption
Corruption remains a major issue in the country. Bangladesh ranked 151st out of 180 countries in the Transparency International's Corruption Perception Index in 2024, slipping from 149 in 2023.[38] The issue of corruption took a central stage in election campaigns, with parties like Jamaat-e-Islami regularly spoke against corruption.[39]
Extortionism
Extortionism in the country grew unprecedentedly in the aftermath of the July Revolution.[40] The parties like BNP and NCP (along with its affiliates Students Against Discrimination, Jatiya Nagorik Committee and Jatiya Chhatra Shakti) faced heavy criticism for involvement with extortion.[41] The BNP particularly faced backlash for its leaders involvement in various extortion scandals.[42]
Proportional representation
Proportional representation (PR) emerged as a key issue among political parties in the election campaigns. The existing first-past-the-post (FPTP) electoral system has been criticised as disproportional[43][44][45] and a key driver of political deadlock in the country.[45] Some of the leading minor parties, including National Citizen Party, Bangladesh Jamaat-e-Islami, Islami Andolan Bangladesh, Communist Party of Bangladesh, Gono Odhikar Parishad, Amar Bangladesh Party etc., had been in staunch opposition to the system and in support of PR, where the BNP remains a supporter of FPTP.[46][47][48][49][50]
A Shushashoner Jonno Nagorik opinion poll conducted on 1,373 person between May and July 2025 found that 71% people in the country support PR in the proposed upper house of the Jatiya Sangsad.[51]
Eight parties led by Jamaat-e-Islami organized mass demonstrations in Dhaka in support of PR on 11 November 2025.[52] It's leaders also warned general election not to take place before a referendum on July Charter.[53]
Hindu vote bank
A large number of Hindus voted for the Awami League in the previous general elections. Due to absence of the party in the 2026 election, parties like the BNP and the Jamaat-e-Islami actively conducted programmes to attract the Hindu voters.[54][55] The BBC Bangla reported that the BNP maintains a stronghold amongst the Hindu voters,[55] and the party promised to create special tribunal and security cell to prevent communal violence against the religious minorities.[37]
Party campaigns
Bangladesh Nationalist Party
The BNP's primary candidates selection started in late-September 2025.[56] The party sources reported that the candidates in approximately 200 seats were finalized by mid-October. However, the party was facing difficulties to determine candidates for 60–70 seats in due to internal conflicts and multiple strong candidates.[57]
The BNP announced their candidacy list for 237 constituencies on 3 November 2025. It's incumbent chairperson and former prime minister of Bangladesh, Khaleda Zia, would compete from three constituencies.[58] However, serious dissatisfaction arose over the nomination in more than 40 seats, leading to frequent protests by the supporters of several nomination seekers. Party leaders feared that this might weaken the party unity in several electorates.[59]
In the second phrase, the BNP declared candidacy list for 36 seats, including seats of many leaders of the allied parties. This created dissatisfaction among the allied parties, which even led to the conclusion of Bangladesh Labour Party 18-year-long alignment with the party.[60] On the other hand, the Bangladesh Liberal Democratic Party and the Bangladesh Jatiya Dal merged with the BNP on 9 and 22 December, respectively.[61][62]
Between 23 and 24 December, BNP announced 14 conceded seats for the allied parties, including the Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam Bangladesh, Islami Oikya Jote, Jatiya Party (Zafar), Gono Odhikar Parishad, Revolutionary Workers Party of Bangladesh, Ganosanhati Andolan, Nagorik Oikya, Nationalist Democratic Movement, and the National People's Party.[63][64] At the same day, Bobby Hajjaj, leader of the NDM, and Redowan Ahmed, secretary-general of the Liberal Democratic Party, joined the party.[64]
BBC Bangla reported that the BNP's electoral campaign would revolve around the personality of Tarique Rahman, who had been in exile since 2009. However, experts think that it may create challenges for the BNP due to Tarique's controversial legacy involving the Hawa Bhaban and corruption.[65] The Prothom Alo reported that the BNP's electoral manifesto will be based on the party's promulgated 31-points, July Charter, and concurrent political catalogue. Key points will include reorganization of electoral rule, restoration of democracy, freedom of judiciary, administrative decentralization, security of human rights and strengthening the anti-corruption structure.[37] The party's recent rhetoric provided a "liberal mantle" and preservation of the legacy of the Liberation War.[66]
For the first time, since the 1991 general election, the BNP has decided to participate the elections on its own, without being in formal/informal alliance with the Jamaat-e-Islami. The BNP general secretary Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir confirmed the conclusion of its alliance with the Jamaat-e-Islami in August 2025.[67] Political analyst Faisal Mahmud suggested that the split maybe driven by the BNP's attempt to "appropriate the moral vocabulary of secular nationalism" in order to occupy the "void" left by the AL. According to him, the split can reshape Bangladesh's future political landscape "dramatically".[66]
Bangladesh Jamaat-e-Islami
The Jamaat-e-Islami allied with like-minded 8 Parties including the Islami Andolan Bangladesh, the Khelafat Majlis, the Bangladesh Khelafat Majlis, the Nizam-e-Islam Party, the Bangladesh Khilafat Andolan, the Jatiya Ganatantrik Party, and the Bangladesh Development Party to campaign for five demands before the election, including a referendum for July Charter by November, PR in the both houses of the proposed bicameral legislature, ensuring level playing field for all parties, prosecution of the Awami League government officials, and ban on all activities of the Jatiya Party (Ershad) and the 14-Party Alliance.[68]
Jamaat-e-Islami also tried to unify these parties into an electoral alliance,[69] however, later it was decided to form an electoral compromise. Prothom Alo reported that they were also tying to contanct with NCP, AB Party and GOP.[70]
Prothom Alo also reported that approximately 80% candidates of the Jamaat-e-Islami's primary nomination list are new, who have no pior experience of contesting a general election. The party sources say that it's an attempt to bring young leadership to the forefront.[69]
According to the political analyst Saleh Uddin Ahmad, Jamaat-e-Islami has succeeded creating an image of a relatively corruption free and a modest party, which may give them a strategic upper hand in the election. Despite this, he also pointed out that Jamaat-e-Islami's religious ideology and historical legacy may work as a hindrance for the party's electoral campaign.[71]
Analysing an October–November youth survey by the Bangladesh Youth Leadership Center (BYCL), which showed that a surprisingly large number of Awami League voters switched to the Jamaat-e-Islami, the British journalist David Bergman provided two possible reasons for this shift, first, due to the punitive stance of the BNP towards the AL at the local level, Jamaat-e-Islami is came to be viewed as the "lesser of two evils" by those AL supporters; and secondly, Jamaat-e-Islami's victory may be sought to a group of AL supporters as a "vindication", that the AL's claim to have been the "only true barrier preventing Bangladesh from sliding toward a religious state" was valid.[72]
National Citizen Party
The NCP published their "Manifesto of New Bangladesh" on 3 August 2025 at Central Shaheed Minar, Dhaka. Although not a formal electoral manifesto, it outlined their party policies & agenda if they form government. The manifesto promises a new constitution, state recognition of the July Revolution and massacre, minimization of the role of black money in politics, introduction of "whistleblower protection law" and "Village Parliament", dissolution of the RAB, introduction of universal healthcare, increased state funding on STEM education, artificial intelligence and biotechnology research, increase of women reserved seats in the Jatiya Sangsad to 100, recognition of houseworks in the GDP, establishment of a "Permanent Labor Commission", green technology, strong foreign & defence policy and bilateral solutions to the issues like deaths along the Bangladesh–India border, water sharing of transboundary rivers and Rohingya refugee crisis.[73]
The NCP's campaign is heavily concentrated on constituent assembly election and new constitution, which was decided in a party meeting on 13–14 August. Their unofficial slogans include "This time people, want constituent assembly election" and "Solution to Bangladesh, a new constitution".[74]
Although Jamaat-e-Islami and NCP were seen close and supportive on the issues related to constitutional and electoral reforms, both parties have shown difference and distance on electoral activities. NCP was seen as uninterested to go into any electoral alliance with the Jamaat-e-Islami and other Islamist parties. According to BBC Bangla, the leftist politicians of NCP were pressuring the party leadership for this.[75]
The NCP became the first party to issue nomination forms from 6 November 2025. Notably, they kept 80% discounts for labour-peasants and injured protesters of the July Revolution.[76] The party interviewed more than 1,000 nomination seekers among ordinary citizens nationwide over two days in November. It's leaders moved from booth to booth for suitable candidates.[77] According to the Daily Jugantor, approximately 60% candidates primarily nominated by the NCP were non-NCP members.[78] The party declared their primary candidacy list for 125 seats on 10 December 2025, including the seats of major leaders.[79]
AB Party chairman Mojibur Rahman Monju hinted a possible alliance consisting of the NCP, his party, the Gono Odhikar Parishad and the 6 member parties of the Ganatantra Manch alliance in October 2025.[80][81] The NCP, GOP, AB Party, Rastro Songskar Andolan, Jatiya Samajtantrik Dal (Rab), and United People's Bangladesh expressed interest to join the alliance. However, the NCP's opposition to the inclusion of UP Bangladesh, a splinter faction of the party, and GOP's internal disputes hampered the formation of the alliance.[82]
On 7 December 2025, Democratic Reform Alliance (DRA) was established consisting the NCP, the AB Party, and the Rastro Songskar Andolan. The NCP leader Nahid Islam described it as "not only an electoral alliance – but also a political alliance".[83]
Jatiya Party (Ershad)
Since Hussain Muhammad Ershad's lifetime, the Jatiya Party had been divided into three factions — the Quader faction (led by Ghulam Muhammad Quader), the Raushan faction (led by Raushan Ershad, and the Anisul faction (led by Anisul Islam Mahmud). According to the Daily Manab Zamin significant dispute is ongoing among these factions over the party's electoral symbol plough. Each of factions want to the symbol over their own nominated candidates.[84]
On 8 December 2025, National Democratic Front, led by the Anisul faction and the Jatiya Party (Manju), was launched including 18 parties.[85][86] The alliance declared candidates for 119 constituencies on 23 December, including the seats of top leaders of the member parties.[87]
Communist Party of Bangladesh
The Daily Ittefaq reported that the CPB-led Left Democratic Alliance was tying to create a "convention" of progressive parties under the united front strategy , which is expected to establish by November 2025. They've reportedly contacted with Bangladesh Jatiya Samajtantrik Dal, Antifascist Left Front, Parbatya Chattagram Jana Sanghati Samiti and Democratic Cultural Unity for this.[88]
Timeline
| Poll Event | Schedule |
|---|---|
| Official declaration from the chief adviser | 5 August 2025 |
| Declaration of the schedule | 11 December 2025 |
| Application deadline for candidates | 29 December 2025 |
| Scrutiny of nomination | 30 December 2025 – 4 January 2026 |
| Last Date for Withdrawal of nomination | 20 January 2026 |
| Symbol allocation | 21 January 2026 |
| Start of campaign period | 22 January 2026 |
| End of campaign period | 10 February 2026 |
| Date of Poll | 12 February 2026 |
| Date of Counting of Votes | 12 February 2026 |
| Date of reserved seats Poll | 13 February 2026 |
In a televised address to the nation on 6 June 2025, Yunus declared the general election would be held on any day of the first half of April 2026.[89] The BNP and Jatiya Party opposed holding elections in mid-2026, and demanded that the date be moved forward to December 2025, citing Kalbaisakhi storms and Ramadan.[90] Later on 5 August, Yunus said in a televised broadcast that he would write to the Election Commission to request the election be held in February 2026 before the Ramadan, which will begin as early as 17 February.[91][92]
Chief election commissioner AMM Nasir Uddin's speech on electoral schedule was recorded by the Bangladesh Television (BTV) and the Bangladesh Betar on 10 December 2025, and was broadcast on 11 December.[93]
On 22 December, chief adviser Yunus inaugurated ten campaigning trucks named "Super Caravan", whose work will be to agitate public consciousness on election and informations about referendum.[94]
Referendum
A constitutional referendum will take place in Bangladesh alongside the general election. Voters will be asked about the provisions of the July Charter and related amendments to the Constitution of Bangladesh. July Charter implementation order has been issued for this purpose.[95]
Parties and alliances
BNP+
| Party | Symbol | Flag | Leader | Total seats contested | Seats contested under the alliance | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bangladesh Nationalist Party | Tarique Rahman | 272 | N/a | |||
| Bangladesh Jatiya Party | Andaleeve Rahman | 100 | 1 | |||
| Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam Bangladesh | Ubaydullah Faruk | 80 | 4 | |||
| Gono Odhikar Parishad | Nurul Haq Nur | 80 | 2 | |||
| Ganosanhati Andolan | Zonayed Saki | 70 | 1 | |||
| Jatiya Samajtantrik Dal (Rab) | A. S. M. Abdur Rab | 60 | 1 | |||
| Revolutionary Workers Party of Bangladesh | Khandaker Ali Abbas | 90 | 1 | |||
| Nagorik Oikya | Mahmudur Rahman Manna | 50 | 1 | |||
| Jatiya Party (Zafar) | Mostafa Jamal Haider | 40 | 1 | |||
| Islami Oikya Jote | Abdul Qadir | TBD | 1 | |||
| National People's Party | AZM Fariduzzaman Farhad | TBD | 1 | |||
| Party | Symbol | Flag | Leader | Total seats contested | Seats contested under the alliance | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bangladesh Jamaat-e-Islami | Shafiqur Rahman | 300 | 210 | |||
| Islami Andolan Bangladesh | Syed Rezaul Karim | 300 | 100 | |||
| Khelafat Majlis | Abdul Basit Azad | 146 | 90 | |||
| Jatiya Ganotantrik Party | Tasmia Pradhan | 97 | 80 | |||
| Bangladesh Khilafat Andolan | Habibullah Mianji | 90 | 70 | |||
| Nizam-e-Islam Party | Sorowar Kamal Azizi | 45 | 60 | |||
| Bangladesh Khelafat Majlis | Mamunul Haque | 10 | 50 | |||
| Bangladesh Development Party | Anwarul Islam Chan | 6 | 40 | |||
| Party | Symbol | Flag | Leader | Total seats contested | Seats contested under the alliance | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| National Citizen Party | Nahid Islam | 123 | 30 | |||
| Amar Bangladesh Party | Mojibur Rahman Monju | 123 | 20 | |||
| Rastro Songskar Andolon | Hasnat Quaiyum | 43 | 10 | |||
| Party | Symbol | Flag | Leader | Total seats contested | Seats contested under the alliance | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jatiya Party (Manju) | Anwar Hossain Manju | 120 | 122 | |||
| Jatiya Party (Ershad) | Ghulam Muhammed Quader[a] Anisul Islam Mahmud[b] |
113 | 120 | |||
| Bangladesh Muslim League | Mohsin Rashid | 90 | 118 | |||
| Trinomool BNP | Antara Selima Huda | 45 | 116 | |||
| Bangladesh Sangskritik Muktijote | Abu Layes Munna | 60 | 112 | |||
| Bangladesh Nationalist Movement | Taimur Alam Khandaker | 78 | 100 | |||
CPB+
| Party | Symbol | Flag | Leader | Total seats contested | Seats contested under the alliance | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Communist Party of Bangladesh | Kazi Sajjad Zahir Chandan | 100 | 90 | |||
| Socialist Party of Bangladesh | Bazlur Rashid Firoz | 90 | 80 | |||
| Socialist Party of Bangladesh (Marxist) | Masud Rana | 80 | 70 | |||
| Bangladesh Jatiya Samajtantrik Dal | Sharif Nurul Ambia | 70 | 60 | |||
| Sramik Karmachari Oikya Parishad | Abdul Kader Hawlader | 60 | 50 | |||
| Gano Front | Amirul Nuzhat | 50 | 40 | |||
| Oikya National Awami Party | S M A Sobur | 40 | 30 | |||
| Bangladesh Socialist Party (Mahbub) | Mohinuddin Chowdhury Liton | 30 | 20 | |||
| Ganamukti Union | Nasiruddin Ahmed Nasu | 20 | 10 | |||
| Revolutionary Communist League of Bangladesh | Iqbal Kabir Jahid | 10 | 5 | |||
Greater Sunni Alliance (GSA)
| Party | Symbol | Flag | Leader | Total seats contested | Seats contested under the alliance | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bangladesh Supreme Party | Saifuddin Ahmed Al Hasani Maizbhandari | 100 | 12 | |||
| Bangladesh Islami Front | M A Matin | 90 | 4 | |||
| Islamic Front Bangladesh | Sayed Mohammad Bahadur Shah Mujaddedi | 33 | 6 | |||
Grand Alliance (GA)
| Party | Symbol | Flag | Leader | Total seats contested | Seats contested under the alliance | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jatiya Samajtantrik Dal | Hasanul Haque Inu | 114 | 90 | |||
| Workers Party of Bangladesh | Rashed Khan Menon | 112 | 80 | |||
| Ganatantri Party | Arosh Ali | 122 | 70 | |||
| Bangladesh Tarikat Federation | Syed Najibul Bashar Maizbhandari | 127 | 60 | |||
| Communist Party of Bangladesh (Marxist–Leninist) (Barua) | Dilip Barua | 102 | 50 | |||
Nonaligned parties
| Party | Symbol | Flag | Leader | Total seats contested | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Zaker Party | Ameer Faisal Mujaddedi | 124 | |||
| Krishak Sramik Janata League | Abdul Kader Siddique | 120 | |||
| Liberal Democratic Party | Oli Ahmad | 111 | |||
| Bikalpa Dhara Bangladesh | Mahi B. Chowdhury | 111 | |||
| Nationalist Democratic Movement | 90 | ||||
| Bangladesh Kalyan Party | Syed Muhammad Ibrahim | 90 | |||
| Parbatya Chattagram Jana Samhati Samiti | Shantu Larma | 3[c] | |||
Candidates
Rangpur Division
| Parliamentary Constituency | Bangladesh Nationalist Party+ | Jatiya Party (Ershad)+ | Like-minded 8 Parties | Democratic Reform Alliance | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Panchagarh-1 | BNP | Mohammad Nowshad Jamir | JP(E) | Md. Abu Saleque | JI | Iqbal Hossain | NCP | Sarjis Alam | ||||
| 2 | Panchagarh-2 | BNP | Farhad Hossain Azad | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Muhammad Shafiullah Sufi | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 3 | Thakurgaon-1 | BNP | Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir | JP(E) | Md. Rezaur Razi Swapan Chowdhury | JI | Delwar Hossain | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 4 | Thakurgaon-2 | BNP | Abdus Salam | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Abdul Hakim | NCP | Md. Rabiul Islam | ||||
| 5 | Thakurgaon-3 | BNP | Md. Jahidur Rahman Jahid | JP(E) | Hafiz Uddin Ahmed | JI | Mizanur Rahman | NCP | Md. Golam Mortuza Selim | ||||
| 6 | Dinajpur-1 | BNP | Md. Monjurul Islam | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Md. Matiur Rahman | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 7 | Dinajpur-2 | BNP | Md. Sadiq Riaz | JP(E) | TBD | JI | AKM Afzalul Anam | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 8 | Dinajpur-3 | BNP | Begum Khaleda Zia | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Mainul Alam | NCP | AHM Shamsul Muqtadir | ||||
| 9 | Dinajpur-4 | BNP | Md. Akhtaruzzaman Mia | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Md. Aftab Uddin Molla | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 10 | Dinajpur-5 | BNP | AKM Kamruzzaman | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Anwar Hossain | NCP | Md. Abdul Ahad | ||||
| 11 | Dinajpur-6 | BNP | A. Z. M. Zahid Hossain | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Md. Anwarul Islam | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 12 | Nilphamari-1 | JUIB | Manzurul Islam Effendi | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Abdus Sattar | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 13 | Nilphamari-2 | BNP | A. H. M. Saifullah Rubel | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Khairul Anam | NCP | Md. Kamrul Islam Darpan | ||||
| 14 | Nilphamari-3 | BNP | TBD | JP(E) | Rana Mohammad Sohail | JI | Obaidullah Khan Salafi | NCP | Md. Abu Sayed Leon | ||||
| 15 | Nilphamari-4 | BNP | Md. Abdul Gafur Sarkar | JP(E) | Rashedul Islam | JI | Abdul Montakim | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 16 | Lalmonirhat-1 | BNP | Md. Hasan Rajib Pradhan | JP(E) | Mashiur Rahaman Ranga | JI | Anowarul Islam Raju | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 17 | Lalmonirhat-2 | BNP | TBD | JP(E) | Nigar Sultana Rani | JI | Firoz Haider Lavlu | NCP | Rasel Ahmed | ||||
| 18 | Lalmonirhat-3 | BNP | Asadul Habib Dulu | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Prabhakhar Harun Ar Rashid | NCP | Md. Rokibul Hasan | ||||
| 19 | Rangpur-1 | BNP | Md. Mokarram Hossain Sujon | JP(E) | Monjum Ali | JI | Raihan Siraji | NCP | Md. Al Mamun | ||||
| 20 | Rangpur-2 | BNP | Mohammad Ali Sarkar | JP(E) | Anisul Islam Mondol | JI | A. T. M. Azharul Islam | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 21 | Rangpur-3 | BNP | Md.Shamsuzzaman Samu | JP(E) | GM Quader | JI | Mahbubur Rahman Belal | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 22 | Rangpur-4 | BNP | Mohammad Emdadul Haque Bharsa | JP(E) | Abu Naser Md. Shah Mahbubur Rahman | JI | ATM Azam Khan | NCP | Akhter Hossen | ||||
| 23 | Rangpur-5 | BNP | Md. Golam Rabbani | JP(E) | S. M. Fakhruzzaman Jahangir | JI | Md. Golam Rabbani | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 24 | Rangpur-6 | BNP | Md. Saiful Islam | JP(E) | Nur Alam Jadu | JI | Md. Nurul Amin | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 25 | Kurigram-1 | BNP | Saifur Rahman Rana | JP(E) | A.K.M. Mostafizur Rahman | JI | Anowarul Islam | NCP | Md. Mahfuzul Islam | ||||
| 26 | Kurigram-2 | BNP | Md. Sohel Hossain Kaikobad | JP(E) | Ponir Uddin Ahmed | JI | Yasin Ali Sarkar | NCP | Atik Mujahid | ||||
| 27 | Kurigram-3 | BNP | Tazvirul Islam | JP(E) | Abdus Sobhan | JI | Mahbub Alam Salehi | NCP | Md. Abu Sayed Jony | ||||
| 28 | Kurigram-4 | BNP | Md. Azizur Rahman | JP(M) | Md. Ruhul Amin | JI | Mostafizur Rahman Mostak | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 29 | Gaibandha-1 | BNP | Khandaker Ziaul Islam Mohammad Ali | JP(E) | Shamim Haider Patwary | JI | Md. Majedur Rahman | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 30 | Gaibandha-2 | BNP | Md. Anisuzzaman Khan Babu | JP(E) | Abdur Rashid Sarkar | JI | Md. Abdul Karim Sarkar | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 31 | Gaibandha-3 | BNP | Syed Mainul Hassan Sadiq | JP(E) | Mainur Rabbi Chowdhury Ruman | JI | Nazrul Islam | NCP | Md. Nazmul Hasan Shohag | ||||
| 32 | Gaibandha-4 | BNP | Md. Shamim Kaisar Lincoln | JP(E) | Kazi Mashiur Rahman | JI | Abdur Rahim Sarkar | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 33 | Gaibandha-5 | BNP | Md. Faruk Alam Sarker | JP(E) | Shamim Haider Patwary | JI | Abdullah Warraich | NCP | AKM Asaduzzaman | ||||
Rajshahi Division
| Parliamentary Constituency | Bangladesh Nationalist Party+ | Jatiya Party (Ershad)+ | Like-minded 8 Parties | Democratic Reform Alliance | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 34 | Joypurhat-1 | BNP | Md. Masud Rana Prodhan | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Fazlur Rahman Said | NCP | Golam Kibria | ||||
| 35 | Joypurhat-2 | BNP | Abdul Bari | JP(E) | TBD | JI | SM Rashedul Alam Sobuj | NCP | Abdul Wahab Dewan Kajol | ||||
| 36 | Bogra-1 | BNP | Kazi Rafiqul Islam | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Sahabuddin | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 37 | Bogra-2 | NO | Mahmudur Rahman Manna | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Md. Shahadatuzzaman | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 38 | Bogra-3 | BNP | Abdul Muhit Talukder | JP(E) | Shariful Islam Jinnah | JI | Nur Muhammad Abu Taher | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 39 | Bogra-4 | BNP | Md. Mosharraf Hossain | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Mustafa Faisal Parvez | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 40 | Bogra-5 | BNP | Golam Mohammad Siraj | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Md. Dabibur Rahman | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 41 | Bogra-6 | BNP | Tarique Rahman | JP(E) | Nurul Islam Omar | JI | Abidur Rahman Sohel | NCP | Abdullah-Al-Waqi | ||||
| 42 | Bogra-7 | BNP | Begum Khaleda Zia | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Golam Rabbani | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 43 | Chapai Nawabganj-1 | BNP | Md. Shahjahan Miah | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Md. Keramat Ali | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 44 | Chapai Nawabganj-2 | BNP | Md. Aminul Islam | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Mizanur Rahman | NCP | Rubel Khan | ||||
| 45 | Chapai Nawabganj-3 | BNP | Md. Harunur Rashid | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Nurul Islam Bulbul | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 46 | Naogaon-1 | BNP | Md. Mostafizur Rahman | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Mahtab ul Haq | NCP | Kailash Chandra Rabi Das | ||||
| 47 | Naogaon-2 | BNP | Md. Shamsuzzoha Khan | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Enamul Haq | NCP | Md. Mahfuzur Rahman Chowdhury | ||||
| 48 | Naogaon-3 | BNP | Md. Fazle Huda Babul | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Muhammad Mahfuzur Rahman | NCP | Parimal Chandra Urao | ||||
| 49 | Naogaon-4 | BNP | Ekramul Bari Tipu | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Khondkar Muhammad Abdur Rakib | NCP | Md. Abdul Hamid | ||||
| 50 | Naogaon-5 | BNP | Zahidul Islam Dulu | JP(E) | TBD | JI | ASM Ayem | NCP | Monira Sharmin | ||||
| 51 | Naogaon-6 | BNP | Sheikh Md. Rejaul Islam Reju | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Muhammad Khobirul Islam | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 52 | Rajshahi-1 | BNP | Md. Sharif Uddin | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Mujibur Rahman | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 53 | Rajshahi-2 | BNP | Md. Mizanur Rahman Minu | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Mohammad Jahangir | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 54 | Rajshahi-3 | BNP | Md. Shofiqul Haque Milon | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Abdul Kalam Azad | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 55 | Rajshahi-4 | BNP | D. M. Ziaur Rahman Zia | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Abdul Bari Sardar | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 56 | Rajshahi-5 | BNP | Nazrul Islam | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Nuruzzaman Liton | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 57 | Rajshahi-6 | BNP | Abu Sayed Chad | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Md. Nazmul Haq | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 58 | Natore-1 | BNP | Farzana Sharmin | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Abdul Kalam Azad | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 59 | Natore-2 | BNP | Ruhul Quddus Talukder Dulu | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Md. Yunus Ali | NCP | Abdul Mannaf | ||||
| 60 | Natore-3 | BNP | Md. Anwarul Islam | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Syedur Rahman | NCP | SM Jarjis Kader | ||||
| 61 | Natore-4 | BNP | Md. Abdul Aziz | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Abdul Hakim | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 62 | Sirajganj-1 | BNP | Salim Reza | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Sheikh Abu Yusuf | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 63 | Sirajganj-2 | BNP | Iqbal Hasan Mahmud Tuku | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Jahidul Islam | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 64 | Sirajganj-3 | BNP | Ainul Haq | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Md. Abdus Samad | NCP | Dilshana Parul | ||||
| 65 | Sirajganj-4 | BNP | M. Akbar Ali | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Rafiqul Islam Khan | NCP | Dyuti Oronyo Chowdhury Preeti | ||||
| 66 | Sirajganj-5 | BNP | Md. Amirul Islam Khan Alim | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Ali Azgar | NCP | Manzur Quader | ||||
| 67 | Sirajganj-6 | BNP | M. A. Muhit | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Mizanur Rahman | NCP | SM Saif Mostafiz | ||||
| 68 | Pabna-1 | BNP | TBD | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Nazibul Rahman Momin | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 69 | Pabna-2 | BNP | A. K. M. Selim Reza Habib | JP(E) | TBD | JI | KM Hesab Uddin | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 70 | Pabna-3 | BNP | Hasan Zafir Tuhin | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Ali Azgar | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 71 | Pabna-4 | BNP | Habibur Rahman Habib | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Abu Taleb Mondol | NCP | Md. Abdul Majid | ||||
| 72 | Pabna-5 | BNP | Md. Shamsur Rahman Shimul Bishwas | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Iqbal Hossain | NCP | TBD | ||||
Khulna Division
| Parliamentary Constituency | Bangladesh Nationalist Party+ | Jatiya Party (Ershad)+ | Like-minded 8 Parties | Democratic Reform Alliance | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 73 | Meherpur-1 | BNP | Masud Arun | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Tajuddin Khan | NCP | Md. Sohel Rana | ||||
| 74 | Meherpur-2 | BNP | Md. Amzad Hossain | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Md. Nazmul Huda | NCP | Shakil Ahmad | ||||
| 75 | Kushtia-1 | BNP | Reza Ahmed Bachchu | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Belal Uddin | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 76 | Kushtia-2 | BNP | Raghib Rauf Chowdhury | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Md. Abdul Gafur | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 77 | Kushtia-3 | BNP | Md. Zakir Hossain Sarker | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Mufti Amir Hamza | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 78 | Kushtia-4 | BNP | Syed Mehedi Ahmed Rumi | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Afjal Hossain | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 79 | Chuadanga-1 | BNP | Md. Sharifuzzaman | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Masud Parvez Russell | NCP | Molla Mohammad Faruq Ehsan | ||||
| 80 | Chuadanga-2 | BNP | Mahmud Hasan Khan | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Md. Ruhul Amin | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 81 | Jhenaidah-1 | BNP | TBD | JP(E) | TBD | JI | ESM Matiyar Rahman | NCP | Dayal Bashar | ||||
| 82 | Jhenaidah-2 | GOP | Md. Rashed Khan | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Ali Azam Md. Abu Bakar | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 83 | Jhenaidah-3 | BNP | Mohammad Mehedi Hasan | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Matiur Rahman | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 84 | Jhenaidah-4 | BNP | TBD | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Abu Taleb | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 85 | Jessore-1 | BNP | Md. Mofiqul Hasan Tripti | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Azizur Rahman | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 86 | Jessore-2 | BNP | Mst. Sabira Sultana | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Musleh Uddin Farid | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 87 | Jessore-3 | BNP | Aninda Islam Amit | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Abdul Kader | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 88 | Jessore-4 | BNP | T. S. Ayub | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Golam Rasul | NCP | Md. Shahjahan Kabir | ||||
| 89 | Jessore-5 | IOJ | Mufti Rashid Bin Wakkas | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Gazi Enamul Haq | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 90 | Jessore-6 | BNP | Kazi Rawnakul Islam Srabon | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Moktar Ali | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 91 | Magura-1 | BNP | Monowar Hossain Khan | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Abdul Matin | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 92 | Magura-2 | BNP | Nitai Roy Chowdhury | JP(E) | TBD | JI | AMB Bakir | NCP | Mohammad Tarikul Islam | ||||
| 93 | Narail-1 | BNP | Biswas Jahangir Alam | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Obaydullah Kaiser | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 94 | Narail-2 | NPP | AZM Fariduzzaman Farhad | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Ataur Rahman Bacchu | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 95 | Bagerhat-1 | BNP | TBD | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Mashur Rahman Khan | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 96 | Bagerhat-2 | BNP | TBD | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Sheikh Manjurul Haq Rahad | NCP | Molla Rahmatullah | ||||
| 97 | Bagerhat-3 | BNP | TBD | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Muhammad Abdul Wadud Sekh | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 98 | Khulna-1 | BNP | Amir Ezaz Khan | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Krishna Nandi | NCP | Md. Wahid Uz Zaman | ||||
| 99 | Khulna-2 | BNP | Nazrul Islam Manju | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Sheikh Jahangir Hussain Helal | NCP | Faridul Haque | ||||
| 100 | Khulna-3 | BNP | Rakibul Islam Bakul | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Mahfuzur Rahman | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 101 | Khulna-4 | BNP | Azizul Baree Helal | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Kabirul Islam | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 102 | Khulna-5 | BNP | Mohammad Ali Asghar Lobby | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Mia Golam Parwar | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 103 | Khulna-6 | BNP | Monirul Hasan Bappi | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Md. Abul Kalam Azad | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 104 | Satkhira-1 | BNP | Md. Habibul Islam Habib | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Md. Izzat Ullah | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 105 | Satkhira-2 | BNP | Abdur Rouf | JP(E) | Ashrafuzzaman Ashu | JI | Muhaddis Abdul Khalek | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 106 | Satkhira-3 | BNP | Kazi Alauddin | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Muhaddis Rabiul Bashar | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 107 | Satkhira-4 | BNP | Md. Moniruzzaman | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Gazi Nazrul Islam | NCP | TBD | ||||
Barishal Division
| Parliamentary Constituency | Bangladesh Nationalist Party+ | Jatiya Party (Ershad)+ | Like-minded 8 Parties | Democratic Reform Alliance | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 108 | Barguna-1 | BNP | Md. Nazrul Islam Molla | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Mohibullah Harun | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 109 | Barguna-2 | BNP | Nurul Islam Moni | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Sultan Ahmed | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 110 | Patuakhali-1 | BNP | Altaf Hossain Chowdhury | JP(E) | A. B. M. Ruhul Amin Howlader | JI | Nazmul Ahsan | NCP | Zahirul Islam Musa | ||||
| 111 | Patuakhali-2 | BNP | Shahidul Alam Talukder | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Md. Shafiqul Islam Masud | NCP | Mujahidul Islam Shahin | ||||
| 112 | Patuakhali-3 | GOP | Nurul Haque Nur | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Shah Alam | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 113 | Patuakhali-4 | BNP | A. B. M. Mosharraf Hossain | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Abdul Qayyum | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 114 | Bhola-1 | BNP | Golam Nabi Alamgir | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Md. Nazrul Islam | NCP | Md. Ziaur Rahman | ||||
| 115 | Bhola-2 | BNP | Md. Hafiz Ibrahim | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Fazlul Karim | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 116 | Bhola-3 | BNP | Hafizuddin Ahmed | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Nizamul Haque Naim | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 117 | Bhola-4 | BNP | Mohammad Nurul Islam Nayan | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Mustafa Kamal | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 118 | Barisal-1 | BNP | Zahir Uddin Swapon | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Kamrul Islam | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 119 | Barisal-2 | BNP | Shardar Sharfuddin Ahmed Shantu | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Abdul Mannan | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 120 | Barisal-3 | BNP | Zainul Abedin | JP(E) | Golam Kibria Tipu | JI | Jahiruddin Muhammad Babar | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 121 | Barisal-4 | BNP | Md. Rajib Ahsan | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Abdul Jabbar | NCP | Abu Sayeed Musa | ||||
| 122 | Barisal-5 | BNP | Mazibor Rahman Sarwar | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Moyazzem Hossain Helal | NCP | Md. Nurul Huda Chowdhury | ||||
| 123 | Barisal-6 | BNP | Abul Hossain Khan | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Mahmudunnabi | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 124 | Jhalokati-1 | BNP | Rafiqul Islam Jamal | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Mao. Hemayet Uddin | NCP | Mahmuda Alam Mitu | ||||
| 125 | Jhalokati-2 | BNP | Israt Sultana Elen Bhutto | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Sheikh Neyamul Karim | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 126 | Pirojpur-1 | JP(Z) | Mostafa Jamal Haider | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Masud Sayeedi | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 127 | Pirojpur-2 | BNP | Ahammad Sohel Monzoor | JP(M) | Anwar Hossain Manju | JI | Shamim Sayeedi | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 128 | Pirojpur-3 | BNP | Md. Ruhul Amin Dulal | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Sharif Abdul Jalil | NCP | Md. Shamim Hamidi | ||||
Mymensingh Division
| Parliamentary Constituency | Bangladesh Nationalist Party+ | Jatiya Party (Ershad)+ | Like-minded 8 Parties | Democratic Reform Alliance | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 137 | Jamalpur-1 | BNP | M. Rashiduzzaman Millat | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Adv. Nazmul Haque Sayedee | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 138 | Jamalpur-2 | BNP | A. E. Sultan Mahmud Babu | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Shamiul Haque Farooqui | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 139 | Jamalpur-3 | BNP | Md. Mustafizur Rahman Babul | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Mujibur Rahman Azadi | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 140 | Jamalpur-4 | BNP | Md. Faridul Kabir Talukder Shamim | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Md. Abdul Awal | NCP | Md. Mosharraf Hossain | ||||
| 141 | Jamalpur-5 | BNP | Shah Md. Wares Ali Mamun | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Abdus Sattar | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 142 | Sherpur-1 | BNP | Sunsila Jabrin Priyanka | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Hafez Rashedul Islam | NCP | Md. Likhon Mia | ||||
| 143 | Sherpur-2 | BNP | Mohammad Fahim Chowdhury | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Md. Golam Kibria, VP | NCP | Khokan Chandra Barman | ||||
| 144 | Sherpur-3 | BNP | Md. Mahmudul Haque Rubel | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Alhaj Nuruzzaman Badal | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 145 | Mymensingh-1 | BNP | Syed Emran Saleh Prince | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Mahfuzur Rahman | NCP | Md. Abu Rehan | ||||
| 146 | Mymensingh-2 | BNP | Motaher Hossain Talukder | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Mahbub Mondal | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 147 | Mymensingh-3 | BNP | M. Iqbal Hossain | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Badruzzaman | NCP | Selim Selim | ||||
| 148 | Mymensingh-4 | BNP | TBD | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Kamrul Ahsan | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 149 | Mymensingh-5 | BNP | Mohammad Jakir Hossain | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Matiur Rahman Akand | NCP | Meaz Mehrab Talukder | ||||
| 150 | Mymensingh-6 | BNP | Md. Akhtarul Alam | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Kamrul Hasan | NCP | Jabed Rasin | ||||
| 151 | Mymensingh-7 | BNP | Md. Mahbubur Rahman | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Asaduzzaman | NCP | ATM Mahbub-Ul Alam | ||||
| 152 | Mymensingh-8 | BNP | Lutfullahel Majed Babu | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Manjurul Haque | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 153 | Mymensingh-9 | BNP | Yeaser Khan Chowdhury | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Anwarul Islam Chan | NCP | Ashikin Alam Rajon | ||||
| 154 | Mymensingh-10 | BNP | TBD | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Ismail Hossain | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 155 | Mymensingh-11 | BNP | Fakhar Uddin Ahmed Bacchu | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Saif Ullah Pathan | NCP | Tanha Shanta | ||||
| 156 | Netrokona-1 | BNP | Kayser Kamal | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Abul Hashem | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 157 | Netrokona-2 | BNP | Md. Anwarul Haque | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Enamul Haque | NCP | Fahim Rahman Khan Pathan | ||||
| 158 | Netrokona-3 | BNP | Rafiqul Islam Hilani | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Delwar Hossain Saiful | NCP | Iftekhar Hossain Siddiqui Shamim | ||||
| 159 | Netrokona-4 | BNP | Md. Lutfozzaman Babar | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Al Helal Talukder | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 160 | Netrokona-5 | BNP | Md. Abu Taher Talukder | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Masum Mustafa | NCP | TBD | ||||
Dhaka Division
| Parliamentary Constituency | Bangladesh Nationalist Party+ | Jatiya Party (Ershad)+ | Like-minded 8 Parties | Democratic Reform Alliance | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 129 | Tangail-1 | BNP | Fakir Mahbub Anam Swapan | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Principal Montaz Ali | NCP | Saidul Islam | ||||
| 130 | Tangail-2 | BNP | Abdus Salam Pintu | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Humayun Kabir | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 131 | Tangail-3 | BNP | S. M. Obaidul Haque Nasir | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Husne Mubarak Babul | NCP | Saifullah Haider | ||||
| 132 | Tangail-4 | BNP | Lutfor Rahman Khan Matin | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Professor Khandaker Abdur Razzak | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 133 | Tangail-5 | BNP | Sultan Salauddin Tuku | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Ahsan Habib Masud | NCP | Masudur Rahman Rasel | ||||
| 134 | Tangail-6 | BNP | Md. Rabiul Awwal Lablu | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Dr. Abdul Hamid | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 135 | Tangail-7 | BNP | Abul Kalam Azad Siddiqui | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Principal Abdullah Talukder | NCP | Khondaker Masud Parvez | ||||
| 136 | Tangail-8 | BNP | Ahmad Azam Khan | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Professor Shafiqul Islam Khan | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 161 | Kishoreganj-1 | BNP | Mohammad Mazharul Islam | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Mosaddek Ali Bhuiyan | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 162 | Kishoreganj-2 | BNP | Md. Jalal Uddin | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Shafiqul Islam | NCP | Sayeed Ujjol | ||||
| 163 | Kishoreganj-3 | BNP | Osman Faruk | JP(E) | Mujibul Haque Chunnu | JI | Col. (Retd.) Professor Jihad Khan | NCP | Sheikh Khairul Kabir Ahmed | ||||
| 164 | Kishoreganj-4 | BNP | Md. Fazlur Rahman | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Mohammad Rokon Reza | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 165 | Kishoreganj-5 | BNP | Sheikh Mojibur Rahman Iqbal | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Ramzan Ali | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 166 | Kishoreganj-6 | BNP | Md. Shariful Alam | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Kabir Hossain | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 167 | Manikganj-1 | BNP | S.A. Jinnah Kabir | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Dr. Abu Bakr Siddique | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 168 | Manikganj-2 | BNP | Mainul Islam Khan | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Md. Zahidur Rahman | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 169 | Manikganj-3 | BNP | Afroza Khan Rita | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Principal Maulana Delwar Hossain | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 170 | Munshiganj-1 | BNP | Sheikh Md. Abdullah | JP(E) | TBD | JI | AKM Fakhruddin Raji | NCP | Ali Newaz | ||||
| 171 | Munshiganj-2 | BNP | Mizanur Rahman Sinha | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Professor ABM Fazlul Karim | NCP | Majedul Islam | ||||
| 172 | Munshiganj-3 | BNP | Md. Kamruzzaman | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Dr. Sujan Sharif | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 173 | Dhaka-1 | BNP | Khandaker Abu Ashfaq | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Nazrul Islam | NCP | Md. Rasel Ahmed | ||||
| 174 | Dhaka-2 | BNP | Amanullah Aman | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Taufik Hasan | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 175 | Dhaka-3 | BNP | Gayeshwar Chandra Roy | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Shahinur Islam | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 176 | Dhaka-4 | BNP | Tanveer Ahmed Robin | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Syed Joynul Abedin | NCP | Jahidul Islam | ||||
| 177 | Dhaka-5 | BNP | Nabiullah Nabi | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Mohammad Kamal Hossain | NCP | SM Shahriar | ||||
| 178 | Dhaka-6 | BNP | Ishraque Hossain | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Abdul Mannan | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 179 | Dhaka-7 | BNP | Hamidur Rahman Hamid | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Haji Hafiz Md. Enayetullah | NCP | Tarek Ahmmed Adel | ||||
| 180 | Dhaka-8 | BNP | Mirza Abbas Uddin Ahmed | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Helal Uddin | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 181 | Dhaka-9 | BNP | Habibur Rashid Habib | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Kabir Ahmed | NCP | Tasnim Jara | ||||
| 182 | Dhaka-10 | BNP | Shaikh Rabiul Alam | JP(E) | Kazi Firoz Rashid | JI | Jashim Uddin Sarkar | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 183 | Dhaka-11 | BNP | M. A. Quayum | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Atikur Rahman | NCP | Nahid Islam | ||||
| 184 | Dhaka-12 | BRWP | Saiful Haque | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Saiful Alam Khan Milan | NCP | Nahida Sarwar Niva | ||||
| 185 | Dhaka-13 | NDM | Bobby Hajjaj | JP(E) | Shafiqul Islam Sentu | JI | Muhammad Mubarak Hossain | NCP | Akram Hussain | ||||
| 186 | Dhaka-14 | BNP | Sanjida Islam Tuli | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Mir Ahmad Bin Quasem | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 187 | Dhaka-15 | BNP | Md. Safiqul Islam Milton | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Shafiqur Rahman | NCP | Muhammad Alamgir Ferdous | ||||
| 188 | Dhaka-16 | BNP | Aminul Haque | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Abdul Baten | NCP | Ariful Islam Adib | ||||
| 189 | Dhaka-17 | BJP | Andaleeve Rahman Partho | JP(E) | TBD | JI | SM Khaliduzzaman | NCP | Tasnuva Jabeen | ||||
| 190 | Dhaka-18 | BNP | S.M. Jahangir Hossain | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Ashraf ul Haq | NCP | Nasiruddin Patwary | ||||
| 191 | Dhaka-19 | BNP | Dewan Md. Salauddin | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Afjal Hossain | NCP | Foysal Mahmud Shanto | ||||
| 192 | Dhaka-20 | BNP | TBD | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Abdul Rauf | NCP | Nabila Tasnid | ||||
| 193 | Gazipur-1 | BNP | Md. Mojibur Rahman | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Shah Alam Bakhshi | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 194 | Gazipur-2 | BNP | M. Manjurul Karim Roni | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Hossain Ali | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 195 | Gazipur-3 | BNP | S. M. Rafiqul Islam Bachchu | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Jahangir Alam | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 196 | Gazipur-4 | BNP | Shah Riazul Hannan | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Salahuddin Ayubi | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 197 | Gazipur-5 | BNP | Fazlul Haque Milon | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Khairul Hasan | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 198 | Gazipur-6 | BNP | TBD | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Muhammad Hossain Ali | NCP | Farhad Sohel | ||||
| 199 | Narsingdi-1 | BNP | Khairul Kabir Khokon | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Ibrahim Bhuiyan | NCP | Md. Abdullah Al Foysal | ||||
| 200 | Narsingdi-2 | BNP | Abdul Moyeen Khan | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Amjad Hossain | NCP | Sarowar Tusher | ||||
| 201 | Narsingdi-3 | BNP | TBD | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Mostafizur Rahman Kawsar | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 202 | Narsingdi-4 | BNP | Sardar Md. Shakhawat Hossain Bokul | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Jahangir Alam | NCP | Md. Mamunur Rahman Jahangir | ||||
| 203 | Narsingdi-5 | BNP | Md. Ashraf Uddin Bokul | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Jahangir Alam | NCP | Md. Nazmul Haque Shikder | ||||
| 204 | Narayanganj-1 | BNP | Mustafizur Rahman Bhuiyan Dipu | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Anwar Hossain Molla | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 205 | Narayanganj-2 | BNP | Nazrul Islam Azad | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Elias Molla | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 206 | Narayanganj-3 | BNP | Md. Azharul Islam Mannan | JP(E) | Liyakot Hossain Khoka | JI | Iqbal Hossain Bhuiyan | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 207 | Narayanganj-4 | JUIB | Monir Hossain Qasemi | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Abdul Jabbar | NCP | Abdullah Al Amin | ||||
| 208 | Narayanganj-5 | BNP | TBD | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Moinuddin Ahmed | NCP | Ahmedur Rahman Tonu | ||||
| 209 | Rajbari-1 | BNP | Ali Newaz Mahmud Khaiyam | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Advocate Nurul Islam | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 210 | Rajbari-2 | BNP | Md. Harun-or-Rashid | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Harun or Rashid | NCP | Jamil Hijazi | ||||
| 211 | Faridpur-1 | BNP | Khandaker Nasirul Islam | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Ilias Molla | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 212 | Faridpur-2 | BNP | Shama Obaid Islam | JP(E) | Shah Mohammad Abu Zafar | JI | Sohrab Hossain | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 213 | Faridpur-3 | BNP | Nayab Yusuf Ahmed | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Abdut Tawab | NCP | Syeda Nilima Dowla | ||||
| 214 | Faridpur-4 | BNP | Shohidul Islam Babul | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Sarwar Hossain | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 215 | Gopalganj-1 | BNP | Md. Selimuzzaman Molla | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Abdul Hamid | NCP | Proloy Kumar Paul | ||||
| 216 | Gopalganj-2 | BNP | K. M. Babar Ali | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Azmal Hossain | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 217 | Gopalganj-3 | BNP | S. M. Jilani | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Rezaul Karim | NCP | Md. Ariful Daria | ||||
| 218 | Madaripur-1 | BNP | Nadira Akhtar | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Sarwar Hossain | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 219 | Madaripur-2 | BNP | Jahandar Ali Khan | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Abdus Sobahan Khan | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 220 | Madaripur-3 | BNP | Anisur Rahman | JP(M) | Sheikh Shahidul Islam | JI | Md. Rafiqul Islam | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 221 | Shariatpur-1 | BNP | Sayeed Ahmed Aslam | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Mosarraf Hossain Masud | NCP | Md. Abdur Rahman | ||||
| 222 | Shariatpur-2 | BNP | Md. Shafiqur Rahman Kiron | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Mahmud Hossain Bakaul | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 223 | Shariatpur-3 | BNP | Mia Nur Uddin Ahmed Apu | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Muhammad Azharul Islam | NCP | TBD | ||||
Sylhet Division
| Parliamentary Constituency | Bangladesh Nationalist Party+ | Jatiya Party (Ershad)+ | Like-minded 8 Parties | Democratic Reform Alliance | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 224 | Sunamganj-1 | BNP | Anisul Haq | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Tofayel Ahmed Khan | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 225 | Sunamganj-2 | BNP | Nasir Hossain Chowdhury | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Mohammad Shishir Manir | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 226 | Sunamganj-3 | BNP | Mohammad Kaisar Ahmed | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Yasin Khan | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 227 | Sunamganj-4 | BNP | Nurul Islam | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Advocate Shamsuddin | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 228 | Sunamganj-5 | BNP | Kalim Uddin Ahmed Milon | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Abdus Salam Madani | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 229 | Sylhet-1 | BNP | Khandaker Abdul Muktadir Chowdhury | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Habib ur Rahman | NCP | Ehtesham Haque | ||||
| 230 | Sylhet-2 | BNP | Most. Tahsina Rushdir Luna | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Abdul Hannan | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 231 | Sylhet-3 | BNP | Mohammed Abdul Malique | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Lukman Ahmed | NCP | Nurul Huda Juned | ||||
| 232 | Sylhet-4 | BNP | Ariful Haque Choudhury | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Joynal Abedin | NCP | Md. Rashel Ul Alam | ||||
| 233 | Sylhet-5 | JUIB | Ubaydullah Faruk | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Anwar Hossain Khan | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 234 | Sylhet-6 | BNP | Emran Ahmed Chowdhury | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Muhammad Selim Uddin | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 235 | Moulvibazar-1 | BNP | Nasir Uddin Ahmed Mithu | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Aminul Islam | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 236 | Moulvibazar-2 | BNP | Shawkat Hossain Saku | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Engineer Am Shahed Ali | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 237 | Moulvibazar-3 | BNP | M. Naser Rahman | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Abdul Mannan | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 238 | Moulvibazar-4 | BNP | Md. Mujibur Rahman Chowdhury | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Advocate Abdur Rab | NCP | Pritom Dash | ||||
| 239 | Habiganj-1 | BNP | Reza Kibria | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Md. Shahjahan Ali | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 240 | Habiganj-2 | BNP | Abu Mansur Sakhawat Hasan Jibon | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Jillur Rahman Azmi | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 241 | Habiganj-3 | BNP | G. K. Gouse | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Kazi Mahsin Ahmed | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 242 | Habiganj-4 | BNP | S. M. Faisal | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Mokhlesur Rahman | NCP | Nahid Uddin Tarek | ||||
Chattogram Division
| Parliamentary Constituency | Bangladesh Nationalist Party+ | Jatiya Party (Ershad)+ | Like-minded 8 Parties | Democratic Reform Alliance | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 243 | Brahmanbaria-1 | BNP | M. A. Hannan | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Md. Aminul Islam | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 244 | Brahmanbaria-2 | JUIB | Junaid Al Habib | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Muhammad Mubarak Hossain | NCP | Ashraf Uddin Mahdi | ||||
| 245 | Brahmanbaria-3 | BNP | Md. Khaled Hossain Mahbub Shemal | JP(E) | Shah Jamal Rana | JI | Junayed Hasan | NCP | Md. Ataullah | ||||
| 246 | Brahmanbaria-4 | BNP | Mushfiqur Rahman | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Ataur Rahman Sarkar | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 247 | Brahmanbaria-5 | BNP | Md. Abdul Mannan | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Abdul Baten | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 248 | Brahmanbaria-6 | GA | Zonayed Saki | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Dewan Nakibul Huda | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 249 | Comilla-1 | BNP | Khandaker Mosharraf Hossain | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Moniruzzaman Bahalul | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 250 | Comilla-2 | BNP | Md. Selim Bhuiyan | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Nazim Uddin Molla | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 251 | Comilla-3 | BNP | Kazi Shah Mofazzal Hossain Kaikobad | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Yusuf Hakim Sohel | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 252 | Comilla-4 | BNP | Manjurul Ahsan Munshi | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Saiful Islam | NCP | Hasnat Abdullah | ||||
| 253 | Comilla-5 | BNP | Md. Jashim Uddin | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Mubarak Hossain | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 254 | Comilla-6 | BNP | Monirul Haq Chowdhury | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Kazi Din Mohammad | NCP | Navid Nowroz Shah | ||||
| 255 | Comilla-7 | BNP | Redwan Ahmed | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Maulana Mosarraf | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 256 | Comilla-8 | BNP | Zakaria Taher Sumon | JP(E) | Nurul Islam Milon | JI | Shafiqul Alam Helali | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 257 | Comilla-9 | BNP | Md. Abul Kalam | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Syed AKM Sarwar Uddin Siddiqui | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 258 | Comilla-10 | BNP | Abdul Gafur Bhuiyan | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Muhammad Yasin Arafat | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 259 | Comilla-11 | BNP | Md. Kamrul Huda | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Syed Abdullah Muhammad Taher | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 260 | Chandpur-1 | BNP | A. N. M. Ehsanul Hoque Milan | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Abu Nasar Ashrafi | NCP | Ariful Islam | ||||
| 261 | Chandpur-2 | BNP | Md. Jalal Uddin | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Abdul Mubin | NCP | Israt Jahan Bindu | ||||
| 262 | Chandpur-3 | BNP | Sheikh Farid Ahmed Manik | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Shahjahan Mia | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 263 | Chandpur-4 | BNP | Harunur Rashid | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Billal Hossain Miyaji | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 264 | Chandpur-5 | BNP | Md. Mominul Haque | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Abul Hossain | NCP | Md. Mahbub Alam | ||||
| 265 | Feni-1 | BNP | Begum Khaleda Zia | JP(E) | Nazma Akther | JI | ESM Kamal Uddin | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 266 | Feni-2 | BNP | Joynal Abedin | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Liakat Ali Bhuiya | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 267 | Feni-3 | BNP | Abdul Awal Mintoo | JP(E) | Masud Uddin Chowdhury | JI | Mohammad Fakhruddin | NCP | Mohammad Abul Kashem | ||||
| 268 | Noakhali-1 | BNP | Mahbub Uddin Khokon | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Muhammad Saifullah | NCP | Md. Omar Farouq | ||||
| 269 | Noakhali-2 | BNP | Zainul Abdin Farroque | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Syed Ahmed | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 270 | Noakhali-3 | BNP | Barkat Ullah Bulu | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Borhan Uddin | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 271 | Noakhali-4 | BNP | Md. Shahjahan | JP(E) | Mobabor Hossain Azad | JI | Ishak Khondkar | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 272 | Noakhali-5 | BNP | Muhammad Fakhrul Islam | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Belayet Hossain | NCP | Humayra Noor | ||||
| 273 | Noakhali-6 | BNP | Mahbuber Rahman Samim | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Shah Muhammad Mahfuzul Haq | NCP | Abdul Hannan Masud | ||||
| 274 | Lakshmipur-1 | BNP | Shahadat Hossain Salim | JP(E) | Md. Belal Hossain | JI | Nazmul Islam | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 275 | Lakshmipur-2 | BNP | Abul Khair Bhuiyan | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Ruhul Amin Bhuiya | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 276 | Lakshmipur-3 | BNP | Shahid Uddin Chowdhury Anee | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Rezaul Karim | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 277 | Lakshmipur-4 | BNP | ABM Ashrafuddin Nizan | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Ashrafur Rahman Hafizullah | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 278 | Chittagong-1 | BNP | Nurul Amin | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Saifur Rahman | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 279 | Chittagong-2 | BNP | Sarwar Alamgir | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Nural Amin | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 280 | Chittagong-3 | BNP | Mostafa Kamal Pasha | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Mohammad Alauddin Sikder | ABP | Ataur Rahman Noor | ||||
| 281 | Chittagong-4 | BNP | Kazi Salahuddin | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Anowar Siddiqui Chowdhury | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 282 | Chittagong-5 | BNP | Mir Mohammad Helal Uddin | JP(E) | Anisul Islam Mahmud | JI | Abdul Malek Chowdhury | ABP | Didarul Alam | ||||
| 283 | Chittagong-6 | BNP | Giasuddin Quader Chowdhury | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Shahjahan Manju | NCP | Mohiuddin Jilani | ||||
| 284 | Chittagong-7 | BNP | Hummam Quader Chowdhury | JP(E) | Nazrul Islam | JI | ATM Rezaul Karim | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 285 | Chittagong-8 | BNP | Ershad Ullah | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Md. Abu Naser | NCP | Md. Jobairul Hasan Arif | ||||
| 286 | Chittagong-9 | BNP | Mohammad Abu Sufian | JP(E) | Solaiman Alam Seth | JI | AKM Fazlul Haque | NCP | Md. Riazul Anwar Chowdhury Sintu | ||||
| 287 | Chittagong-10 | BNP | Amir Khasru Mahmud Chowdhury | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Shamsuzzaman Helali | NCP | Shagufta Bushra Mishma | ||||
| 288 | Chittagong-11 | BNP | TBD | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Mohammad Shafiul Alam | NCP | Mohammad Azad Dovash | ||||
| 289 | Chittagong-12 | BNP | Mohammad Enamul Haque | JP(E) | Sirajul Islam Chowdhury | JI | Farid Ul Alam | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 290 | Chittagong-13 | BNP | Sarwar Jamal Nizam | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Mahmudul Hasan | NCP | Jubairul Alam Manik | ||||
| 291 | Chittagong-14 | LDP | Omar Faruque | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Shahadat Hossain | NCP | Muhammad Hasan Ali | ||||
| 292 | Chittagong-15 | BNP | Najmul Mostafa Amin | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Shajahan Chowdhury | NCP | Abdul Mabud Syed | ||||
| 293 | Chittagong-16 | BNP | Miskatul Islam Chowdhury Pappa | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Muhammad Jahirul Islam | NCP | Mir Arshadul Haque | ||||
| 294 | Cox's Bazar-1 | BNP | Salahuddin Ahmed | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Abdullah Al Faruk | NCP | Maimul Ahsan Khan | ||||
| 295 | Cox's Bazar-2 | BNP | Alamgir Mahfuzullah Farid | JP(E) | TBD | JI | A. H. M. Hamidur Rahman Azad | NCP | Abu Sayeed Muhammad Shuja Uddin | ||||
| 296 | Cox's Bazar-3 | BNP | Lutfur Rahman Kajal | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Shahidul Alam Bahadur | NCP | TBD | ||||
| 297 | Cox's Bazar-4 | BNP | Shahjahan Chowdhury | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Nur Ahmed Anwari | NCP | Muhammad Hossain | ||||
| 298 | Khagrachari | BNP | Wadud Bhuiyan | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Eyakub Ali Chowdhury | NCP | Manzila Sultana | ||||
| 299 | Rangamati | BNP | Dipen Dewan | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Moktar Ahmed | NCP | Priyo Chakma | ||||
| 300 | Bandarban | BNP | Saching Prue Jerry | JP(E) | TBD | JI | Abul Kalam | NCP | Maung Sa Prue Chowdhury | ||||
Opinion polls
| Polling agency |
Fieldwork dates |
Date published |
Sample size |
Margin of error |
AL | JP(E) | BNP | IAB | Jamaat | NCP | Others | Independents | None | Decided, will not disclose | Undecided | "Can't say"/ No answer |
Lead (pp) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BYLC | 10 — 21 Oct 2025 | 10 Nov 2025 | 2,545[d] | — | 9.5% | 0.4% | 19.6% | — | 16.9% | 3.6% | 1.5%[e] | 0.7% | — | — | 30% | 17.7% | 2.7 |
| Innovision Consulting | 2 – 15 Sep 2025 | 24 Sep 2025 | 10,413 | ± 0.96% | 8.5% | 0.4% | 18.7% | 1.4% | 13.8% | 1.9% | 0.4% | — | — | 9.1% | 30.7% | 9.1% | 4.9 |
| BRAC | 1 – 20 Jul 2025 | 11 Aug 2025 | 5,489 | ± 1.32% | 7.3% | 0.3% | 12% | — | 10.4% | 2.8% | 2.5% | — | — | 14.4% | 48.5% | — | 1.6 |
| SANEM | 20 — 31 May 2025 | 7 Jul 2025 | 2,003[f] | ± 2% | 14.51% | 3.64% | 37.45% | — | 21.72% | 15.3% | 4.99%[g] | — | — | — | — | 3.39% | 16.73 |
| All activities of Awami League banned on 10 May 2025 | |||||||||||||||||
| Innovision Consulting | 19 Feb — 3 Mar 2025 | 8 Mar 2025 | 10,696 | ± 0.8% | 5.7% | 0.4% | 17% | 1.1% | 12.9% | 2.1%[h] | 1.4% | — | — | 21.3% | 29.4% | 8.6% | 4.1 |
| Formation of National Citizen Party (NCP) by the student leaders on 28 February 2025 | |||||||||||||||||
| BRAC | 15 — 31 Oct 2024 | 12 Dec 2024 | 4,158 | ± 1.55% | 9% | 1% | 16% | — | 11% | 2%[i] | 9%[j] | — | 2% | — | 38% | 13% | 5 |
| Innovision Consulting | 29 Aug — 8 Sep 2024 | 10 Sep 2024 | 5,115 (field) | ± 1.4% | 5% | 1% | 21% | 3% | 14% | 10% | 1% | 3% | 2% | — | 34% | 4% | 7 |
| 3,581 (online) | ± 1.67% | 10% | 0% | 10% | 1% | 25% | 35% | 1% | 3% | 3% | — | 11% | 0% | 10 | |||
| Average | 7.5% | 0.5% | 15.5% | 2% | 19.5% | 22.5% | 1% | 3% | 2.5% | — | 22.5% | 2% | 3 | ||||
| 2018 general election[k] | 74.96% | 5.22% | 11.73% | 1.47% | — | N/A | 1.76% | N/A | N/A | N/A | 63.23 | ||||||
Violence
Michael Kugelman, senior fellow with the Asia Pacific Foundation of Canada, expressed concerns of violent actions from the Awami League in reaction to the verdict of the Trial of Sheikh Hasina ahead of the general election.[96] Kugelman’s concerns were elaborated on by geopolitical analyst Bahauddin Foizee, who noted in The Diplomat that multiple layers of conflict were likely, including between the government and the Awami League, and between the Awami League and other political parties.[97][98][99][100][101]
Foizee pointed out that the BNP and Jamaat-e-Islami, both historically united in opposition to Hasina, are now vying for dominance in the post-Hasina political landscape, which could lead to violent confrontations between the two.[102][103][104][105][101] He also highlighted the danger of intra-party conflicts within the BNP and Jamaat, noting that such internal struggles, long embedded in Bangladesh’s political culture, could spill over into public unrest, further deepening instability.[106][107][108][109][101]
On 12 December 2025, Osman Hadi, leader of Inqilab Moncho and an independent candidate for the Dhaka-8 constituency, was shot by Awami League-backed assailants riding motorcycles while conducting an election campaign in the Paltan area of Dhaka. He was later taken to the hospital in critical condition, where he fell into a coma.[110][111][112] Several parties condemned the incident.[113][114][115] He died on 18 December while undergoing treatment in Singapore General Hospital.[116]
Misinformation
A BBC Bangla report found that artificial intelligence generated misinformation could impact the general election. Started by the Jamaat-e-Islami supporters, it quickly spread among the BNP and the NCP supporters, which shows fake campaign and voter base of the respective party. According to Dhaka University professor Saiful Alam Chowdhury, such "information disorder" risks post-election riots like Brazil in Bangladesh.[117]
See also
- 2026 national electoral calendar
- 2026 elections in Bangladesh
- 2025 Dhaka University Central Students' Union elections
Notes
- ^ a b GM Quader is the legally recognized leader of the party. The leadership is disputed among Quader, Raushan Ershad, and Anisul Islam Mahmud.
- ^ a b Only the Anisul faction of the party is member of the alliance.
- ^ It is a regional party that contests only the three Hill Tracts constituencies.
- ^ The survey was conducted only on people beeen the ages of 18 to 35.
- ^ 1.5% for "Other Islamic Parties", and 0.0% for "Other Leftist Parties".
- ^ The survey was conducted only on people between the ages of 15 to 35.
- ^ 4.44% for "Other Islamist parties", and 0.55% for "Others".
- ^ NCP was not formed during the survey. Respondents were asked if they are going to support student led party.
- ^ In a separate question, 40% of the respondents said that they'll vote for a student-led platform if its launched, while 44% said they will not endorse it. Among the rest 9% were undecided and 8% did not give any answer.
- ^ 3% for "other Islamic groups", 2% for "a new political party formed by politicians", and 4% for "others".
- ^ Widely considered to be rigged.
References
- ^ Foizee, Bahauddin. "Bangladesh's Pivotal Election and Referendum Has a Date. Will Unrest Follow?". thediplomat.com. Retrieved 2025-12-17.
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As the country moves closer to the upcoming elections, tensions are growing on multiple fronts. There is the potential for clashes not only between the Awami League and law enforcement agencies, but also between the Awami League and other political parties, particularly the BNP, JI, and NCP.
- ^ "Bangladesh Election: Foizee Warns of Unrest, Yet Hope Remains". South Asia Journal.
- ^ Kumari, Rupa (2025-12-14). "Expert Forecast on Bangladesh's Path to the 2026 Election". CounterCurrents. Retrieved 2025-12-17.
- ^ "Bangladesh Politics Could Get Uglier". International Policy Digest. Retrieved 2025-12-17.
Foizee underscores the danger of large-scale protests and street violence...confrontations could escalate not only between the Awami League and the state, but also between rival contenders who see the transitional moment as their best shot at power.
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- ^ "Bangladesh Election: Foizee Warns of Unrest, Yet Hope Remains". South Asia Journal.
In The Diplomat, geopolitical analyst Bahauddin Foizee highlights the deeply fractured nature of Bangladesh's political landscape. The Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP), ..., and the Bangladesh Jamaat-e-Islami (Jamaat), ..., are both positioning themselves as heirs to the post-Hasina order. Though united in their opposition to Hasina, the two parties are now competing with each other for electoral constituencies in the coming election.
- ^ "Bangladesh's Pivotal Election and Referendum Has a Date. Will Unrest Follow?". The Diplomat. Retrieved 2025-12-17.
...with Hasina's Awami League barred from participating in the election, the resulting political vacuum could lead to heightened confrontations between the BNP and JI, two parties with a long history of animosity toward the Awami League. Although in the past they often found common ground in their opposition to Hasina, these parties are now competing for power and influence. The rivalry between the BNP and JI could exacerbate political instability as they vie for dominance in the post-Hasina landscape. Moreover, internal divisions within the BNP and JI may further fuel unrest.
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Foizee's analysis also emphasizes ... both parties were historically opposed to Hasina; now they are trying to dominate the post-Hasina landscape, and to claim the mantle of democratic restoration without surrendering their own partisan ambitions.
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Foizee's analysis, presented in the style of a risk intelligence report, emphasizes the high risk of large-scale protests and street violence. With Hasina's party banned, the political vacuum could escalate confrontations, particularly between the BNP and Jamaat, who are already locked in their own power struggle.
- ^ Kumari, Rupa. "Bangladesh Politics Could Get Uglier". International Policy Digest. Retrieved 2025-12-17.
The problem, Foizee suggests, is not simply rivalry between parties, but rivalry within them. Internal divisions...inside both the BNP and Jamaat could further fuel unrest, as leaders fight for nominations, constituencies, and the authority to speak for the party as a whole...these intra-party contests can spill outward, transforming organizational disputes into public confrontations...
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Foizee hints that such intra-party competition has historically fueled localized violence, particularly in tightly contested districts.
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Foizee notes that such intra-party conflicts will exacerbate broader unrest and undermine efforts to present a united front within each party.
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