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New Delhi: The Left Unity coalition secured a comprehensive victory in the Jawaharlal Nehru University Students’ Union elections Thursday, winning all four central panel positions and maintaining its dominance over the RSS-backed ABVP. Just a year after the Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad (ABVP) broke a decade-long dry spell by securing the joint secretary’s post in the previous JNUSU polls, the Left alliance comprising the All India Students’ Association (AISA), Students’ Federation of India (SFI) and Democratic Students’ Federation (DSF) bounced back emphatically in the 2025-26 election, reaffirming its long-standing dominance on the campus. Aditi Mishra from AISA, contesting as the United Left’s presidential candidate, defeated RSS-backed ABVP’s Vikas Patel by a margin of 449 votes, polling 1,937 votes against Patel’s 1,488. Mishra, who hails from Varanasi, Uttar Pradesh, is a PhD scholar at the Centre for Comparative Politics and Political Theory, School of International Studies (SIS). Her research focuses on “Gendered violence and the ways women of Uttar Pradesh have been mounting resistance since 2012.” Known for her activism on gender justice, she said the results were a mandate “against hooliganism, Islamophobia, casteism, and misogyny” and “in favour of quality and low-cost education.” Kizhakoot Gopika Babu from SFI bagged the vice-president’s post after defeating ABVP’s Tanya Kumari by 1,314 votes. Gopika secured 3,101 votes. A PhD student at the Centre for the Study of Law and Governance, School of Social Sciences, she joined JNU in 2022 after completing her master’s in Sociology from Miranda House, Delhi University. She was actively involved in campaigns to reopen Barak Hostel and to conduct the JNUSU elections after they had been stalled. Sunil Yadav of DSF and Danish Ali of AISA won the general secretary and joint secretary posts, respectively, after defeating their right-wing rivals Rajeshwar Kant Dubey and Anuj. Yadav secured 2,005 votes against Dubey’s 1,901, while Ali won by a margin of 286 votes. Yadav, a first-generation graduate from Bedipur village in Uttar Pradesh’s Basti district, is a PhD scholar from SIS. Ali, a first-year PhD student from the School of Social Sciences, hails from Bandarbarru village in Madhya Pradesh’s Narsinghpur district. This year, around 9,043 students were eligible to vote. The polls recorded a 67 per cent turnout, slightly lower than the previous election’s 70 per cent. The campus saw vibrant participation with students queuing up outside hostels and schools amid chants, drumbeats and campaign songs. With this year’s outcome, the Left Unity has reasserted its political dominance, continuing its long tradition of leadership in the JNU, a campus often seen as a cradle of debate, dissent and student activism.