The recent merger has instilled a sense of discomfort among certain leaders of the NCP (SP), as they are reluctant to operate once more under the stewardship of Ajit Pawar, who has forged an alliance with the BJP.

In late December 2025, Ajit Pawar announced an alliance between his NCP faction and Sharad Pawar’s NCP (SP) for the Pimpri-Chinchwad and Pune municipal corporation polls scheduled for January 15, 2026, framing it as a “Pawar parivar” reunion to consolidate votes against BJP dominance. While both factions stressed the tie-up is limited to these local elections with separate symbols and seat-sharing (e.g., NCP contesting 125 seats in Pune, NCP-SP 40), speculation surged about a full merger post-polls, potentially positioning Ajit to lead Maharashtra politics and Supriya Sule for central roles after Sharad Pawar’s retirement. No full merger occurred by year-end, but the move stemmed from worker pressure, shared turf threats from BJP, and avoiding vote splits.
Background: The 2023 NCP Split
In July 2023, the NCP split when Ajit Pawar, along with several leaders, broke away to join the BJP–Shiv Sena alliance, taking oath as Deputy Chief Minister of Maharashtra. The Election Commission later recognized Ajit Pawar’s faction as the official NCP with the “clock” symbol, while Sharad Pawar’s camp became known as NCP (SP) with the “tutari” (trumpet) symbol. This set the stage for two competing entities contesting future elections separately.
Recent Developments: Reunification in Civic Polls
Pimpri-Chinchwad Municipal Corporation (PCMC)
Alliance Announced: On December 29, 2025, Ajit Pawar publicly announced that both factions will contest the upcoming PCMC elections together, stating that “the parivar (family) has come together”.
Symbol Reconciliation: This move symbolizes a reunification of sorts, merging the “clock” and “tutari” symbols for the civic polls.
Strategic Intent: The announcement is framed as a decision in Maharashtra’s interest, aiming for a consolidated front in local governance.
Pune Municipal Corporation (PMC)
Alliance Also in Pune: Following the PCMC alliance, the two factions extended cooperation to Pune civic elections. NCP (SP) will contest 40 seats, while Ajit Pawar’s NCP will field candidates in 125 wards.
Symbol Retention: Each faction will use its own party symbol—clock for Ajit Pawar’s NCP and tutari for Sharad Pawar’s NCP (SP).
Alliance Scope: This cooperation is explicitly limited to PCMC and PMC only; broader reunification remains unconfirmed.
Political Motive: Rohit Pawar emphasized that the alliance reflects the will of local party workers and aims to counter the BJP’s influence.
Election Context
Pimpri-Chinchwad and Pune represent NCP strongholds, where the 2023 split weakened both factions against BJP-Shiv Sena alliances. Ajit Pawar’s group holds more ground but faces anti-incumbency; Sharad’s relies on loyalists amid MVA rifts. Polls test if reunion boosts combined vote share in these urban civic bodies amid Maharashtra’s 29 municipal elections.

PCMC Polls Strategy
In Pimpri-Chinchwad Municipal Corporation (PCMC), the alliance counters BJP’s expansion after NCP’s 2023 vertical split eroded its base. Ajit Pawar declared the “clock” (NCP) and “tutari” (NCP-SP) symbols uniting, with seat talks finalized to prevent three-way fights benefiting rivals. Analysts view this as a low-risk trial: success rebuilds NCP brand pre-2026 broader polls; failure limits damage to local races. Outcomes could foreshadow statewide realignment, echoing past INC-NCP dominance in councils per historical analyses. Some NCP-SP leaders resigned over Ajit-BJP ties, highlighting internal tensions.
Pune: Talks Collapse for PMC
Negotiations Fail: Prior to the eventual alliance, talks between factions for a Pune-only alliance collapsed on December 27, 2025. Sharad Pawar’s faction rejoined the Maha Vikas Aghadi (MVA) due to disagreements over the seat-sharing ratio and symbol usage.
Core Issue: Ajit Pawar insisted that all candidates from Sharad Pawar’s faction contest under the “clock” symbol and rejected their demand for 68 seats—an offer deemed unacceptable as it would dissolve Sharad Pawar’s faction in Pune.