Kerala's Pala constituency is preparing for a three-way electoral contest in the 2026 Assembly elections involving sitting MLA Mani C. Kappan, Kerala Congress (M) chairman Jose K. Mani, and NDA candidate Shone George. The race follows political shifts since the death of K.M. Mani, turning Pala from a KC(M) stronghold into a contested battleground. Local alliances and issues like development and community concerns will influence the outcome.
The Pala Assembly constituency in Kerala, a traditional stronghold of the Kerala Congress (M) for over five decades, faces heightened uncertainty ahead of the 2026 elections. Sitting MLA Mani C. Kappan, who secured a surprise victory in the 2019 byelection, continues to represent the area after the 2021 polls amid tensions with Jose K. Mani, chairman of KC(M). Following the death of KC(M) patriarch K.M. Mani, internal splits led Jose K. Mani to align KC(M) with the Left Democratic Front (LDF), while Kappan formed the Kerala Democratic Party and joined the rival United Democratic Front (UDF) camp, reshaping coalition dynamics. This has set the stage for a three-way fight, with the National Democratic Alliance (NDA) nominating Shone George, son of former Kerala Congress leader P.C. George. The LDF relies on its organizational strength from recent local polls, where UDF holds sway in eight of 13 local bodies including Pala municipality. KC(M) views the NDA entry as a potential splitter of anti-LDF votes. NDA promotes George via social media, targeting Catholic voters on issues like 'love jihad' and Hindu voters on development under Prime Minister Narendra Modi. UDF banks on voter dissatisfaction with LDF governance and KC(M). Key local factors include the Church's position, natural rubber sector challenges, and uneven development, making every vote critical in this high-stakes contest.