The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) is poised to create history in Mumbai’s civic politics by installing its first-ever Mayor, bringing an end to the Shiv Sena’s 25-year-long dominance over the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC). BJP corporator Ritu Tawde filed her nomination for the mayoral post on Saturday, February 7, 2026, marking a major political shift in the country’s richest civic body.
The BJP’s ally in the ruling Mahayuti alliance, the Eknath Shinde-led Shiv Sena, has announced Sanjay Ghadi as its candidate for the post of Deputy Mayor. Tawde and Ghadi submitted their nomination papers at the municipal secretary’s office in the presence of senior Mahayuti leaders, including Maharashtra Minister Mangal Prabhat Lodha, BJP Mumbai president Amit Satam, former MP Rahul Shewale, and other party functionaries.
Shiv Sena secretary Sanjay More confirmed that Ghadi, a corporator from Ward 5, will serve as Deputy Mayor for a period of 15 months. Party leaders said the decision to split the tenure is aimed at giving leadership opportunities to multiple corporators over the five-year term. Ghadi was earlier associated with the Shiv Sena (UBT) before joining the Eknath Shinde-led faction.
The mayoral and deputy mayoral elections are scheduled for February 11, which also marks the final day for withdrawal of nominations.
Ritu Tawde, a two-term corporator from Ghatkopar East (Ward 132), joined the BJP in 2012 and was elected to the BMC the same year. During her first term, she chaired the Education Committee and actively raised issues related to civic infrastructure, water supply, and public safety. In her previous tenure, Tawde drew attention for raising concerns over objectionable clothing displayed on shop mannequins, a move that sparked public debate.
Addressing a press conference, BJP Mumbai chief Amit Satam said the city is set to get a BJP Mayor after a gap of 44 years. He asserted that the ruling Mahayuti alliance is committed to improving governance and rooting out corruption from the BMC.
“We have the support of 118 corporators, well above the required majority. Mumbai will now have a Marathi, Malvani, Konkani, and Hindu mayor,” Satam said.
In the recently concluded BMC elections, the BJP emerged as the single largest party with 89 seats, while the Shiv Sena secured 29 seats. Together, the Mahayuti alliance commands a strength of 118 corporators in the 227-member House, comfortably crossing the halfway mark of 114.
The Uddhav Thackeray-led Shiv Sena (UBT), which controlled the BMC since 1997, won 65 seats, while its allies—MNS and NCP (SP)—secured six and one seat respectively. Among other parties, the Congress won 24 seats, AIMIM eight, the NCP (Ajit Pawar faction) three, and the Samajwadi Party two. Two independent candidates also registered victories in the high-stakes civic polls held after a nine-year gap.
The BMC has been under the charge of a state-appointed administrator since March 7, 2022, following the expiry of the previous term. With an estimated budget of ₹74,450 crore for 2025–26, the BMC remains the wealthiest civic body in the country, making the mayoral post one of the most influential positions in urban governance.
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