A Sonia Gandhi on the BJP ticket? Only in Munnar BJP candidate Sonia Gandhi. Photo: Viral X image.

A Sonia Gandhi on the BJP ticket? Only in Munnar

by Trans World Features | @twfindia 02 Dec 2025, 10:54 am

In a twist tailor-made for election-season intrigue, a woman named Sonia Gandhi is contesting the upcoming panchayat election in Kerala’s Munnar as a BJP candidate. And yes, there’s a Congress link too.

The BJP’s Sonia Gandhi, a 34-year-old resident of Nallathanni Kallar, has been fielded from the Nallathanni ward (Ward 16) of the local panchayat, according to Manorama.

She is not the Congress veteran and former party president with the same name, but her story contains its own political arc.

Born to the late Dure Raj, a local labourer and Congress leader, Sonia was named after the then Congress president as a mark of admiration. For years, the name was an endearing coincidence in the hills of Idukki.

But life took a political turn after her marriage. Her husband, Subhash, is the BJP’s panchayat general secretary and a former bypoll candidate from Old Munnar Mulakkad.

Over time, she aligned with his party, switching from the symbolic legacy of her name to the political realities around her.

Now, in her first major electoral contest, BJP’s Sonia Gandhi finds herself pitted against Congress candidate Manjula Ramesh and CPI(M)’s Valarmati, meaning a candidate named after Congress’s most recognisable matriarch is running against a Congress nominee.

The Kerala local body elections will be held on December 9 and 11 across 941 gram panchayats, 152 block panchayats, 14 district panchayats, 87 municipalities and six corporations. Vote counting is scheduled for December 13.

Interestingly, Congress isn’t far from the region in another sense. Just 200 km north, Priyanka Gandhi Vadra represents Wayanad in the Lok Sabha — a seat her brother Rahul Gandhi held earlier.

Among more than 75,000 candidates contesting over 21,000 wards statewide, BJP’s Sonia Gandhi stands out for her name alone.

Whether that name becomes an advantage or a source of voter confusion remains uncertain. But Munnar, unquestionably, has found one of this election season’s most unforgettable stories.