Making the announcement, Union Minister Prakash Javadekar said Himanta Biswa Sarma, a state Congress heavyweight who recently joined BJP along with many Congress MLAs, will be the committee's convener.
The party's decision is a break from its Bihar Assembly poll strategy as it had not formed any state wide election committee and instead put many outside as well as local leaders in charge of various zones. A massive loss in Bihar triggered a backlash from within the party over its campaign.
Javadekar parried query on whether Sonowal will be the party's chief ministerial face, saying a decision will be taken by the Parliamentary Board at an appropriate time.
"This is the beginning of our election preparation for Assam. In 2016, BJP will return to its winning ways," he said.
Party president Amit Shah will go to Dibrugarh on November 27 to attend a party meeting, Javadekar said.
Assam is the only one of the five states going to the polls in 2016 which BJP has a realistic chance of winning. After winning Assembly elections in four states in 2014, it suffered massive defeats in Delhi and Bihar that has invigorated the opposition.
BJP won most Lok Sabha seats in Assam in 2014 elections and expects to repeat its feat in the Assembly polls likely to be held in April-May.
The term of Siddhartha Bhattacharya, who was was appointed head of Assam BJP, ended in October.
Bijoy Chakraborty, Kamakhya Tasha, Rajdeep Ray, Vijay
Gupta and Mohammad Awal are the members of the election committee.
Congress is in power in Assam for the last 15 years.
"The way Congress has ruled in the state no section of society is happy," he said.
He also pooh-poohed coming together of non-BJP leaders at the swearing in of Nitish Kumar as Bihar Chief Minister, saying they were brought together by their bitterness against Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
Maintaining that the party viewed the demography as a
challenge, Madhav said BJP concentrated on Upper Assam and tea gardens, considered to be traditional Congress strongholds.
The BJP-lead alliance won 60 of the 126 Assam Assembly seats with its poll partners Asom Gana Parishad (AGP) winning 14 and Bodo Peoples Front 12 seats.
The BJP alliance swept the polls with 86 seats leaving only 26 to the ruling Congress, 13 to the major opposition AIUDF led by Badruddin Ajmal who lost and one to an Independent.
Asom Gana Parishad (AGP) president Atul Bora said, "The people wanted a political change and they supported the BJP-AGP-BJP united fight".
"It was a vote against a corrupt Congress government which did not work for the development of the people", said the leader of the AGP which had ruled the state for two terms.
BPF leader and Bodo Territorial Council chief Hagrama Mohilary said the landslide victory was due to people wanting a change in the state and, therefore, gave their mandate to the BJP-AGP-BPF alliance.
