Politics for 2027 has already started heating up,and BJP National President Nitin Nabin’s three-day Uttarakhand visit feels like early signal only . Not even election year rn,but party is clearly checking its machinery from ground level .
And his visit began on May 28,with focus on Uttarakhand where BJP wants to tighten organization before 2027 Assembly elections . This is not just photo-op type tour,at least from how it is being projected .
Nabin is expected to meet party workers at different levels,including booth-level functionaries . And honestly,booth workers matter a lot in elections,no matter how big top leadership looks from outside .
Few things standing out clearly here:
- Nitin Nabin has started wider organizational outreach with three-day Uttarakhand visit.
- Meetings with Pushkar Singh Dhami,state ministers and booth-level workers are part of plan .
- Sardar Kewal Singh Dhillon has been appointed BJP Punjab unit president ahead of 2027.
And meetings with Uttarakhand Chief Minister Pushkar Singh Dhami and state ministers are also on agenda . Main idea seems to be feedback collection,checking weak spots and making sure party structure does not become lazy before polls.
BJP is preparing for Assembly elections scheduled in 2027 across seven states,including Goa,Gujarat,Manipur,Punjab,Uttar Pradesh,Uttarakhand,and Himachal Pradesh . At present,BJP governs in all these states except Punjab and Himachal Pradesh,so pressure is different in different places.
But Punjab move is more interesting tbh . Nabin appointed Sardar Kewal Singh Dhillon as new president of BJP’s Punjab unit,and this clearly looks like attempt to make party more serious against Aam Aadmi Party government there.
Dhillon is former Congress MLA and is known for his close association with former Punjab Chief Minister Capt Amarinder Singh . So BJP seems to be using local equations and old political networks also,not just national messaging.
And this is where 2027 planning starts looking bigger than one Uttarakhand visit . Ground workers,chief ministers,state units,Punjab reshuffle… all these small moves are being lined up much before actual election heat begins.
Still,big question is whether early organization push can actually convert into votes when local anger,alliances and state issues come into picture…








