Tuesday, October 29, 2019

Rs 3.35 lakh cr for Jal Jeevan Mission

Rs 3.35 lakh cr for Jal Jeevan Mission: PM Modi urges nation to join hands for water conservation
PM Narendra Modi Independence Day speech: The movement towards water conservation has to take place at the grassroots level. It cannot become a mere government programme.

India Today Web Desk
New Delhi
August 15, 2019UPDATED: August 15, 2019 08:39 IST

Prime Minister Narendra Modi delivering his Independence Day speech from the ramparts of Red Fort in Delhi. (Photo: ANI)
Prime Minister Narendra Modi in his Independence Day speech today urged the people to come forward and contribute in conserving water resources and harvest rainwater. PM Modi said this has to be taken up as a mass movement at the grassroots level.

"The movement towards water conservation has to take place at the grassroots level. It cannot become a mere government programme. People from all walks of life have to be integrated in this movement," PM Modi said in his I-Day speech. PM Narendra Modi had said this in his first Mann Ki Baat radio address too after forming the news government.

To focus on water scarcity, the new Modi government had earlier formed a new ministry-the Jal Shakti Ministry which merged two water-related ministries.

In his Independence Day speech, PM Modi said his government is committed to address the problem of water scarcity. He said the government has allocated Rs 3.35 lakh crore for the Jal Jeevan Mission that aims to providing drinking water to every household.

"In the last years, every government at the Centre and various states, irrespective of which party they belonged to, have worked for the welfare of the people. But it is unfortunate that so many people still lack access to water even 70 years after Independence," PM Modi said.

The prime minister said today many states are reeling under the problem of acute water scarcity. PM Modi said his government is committed to provide drinking water to every household. This will be done under the Jal Jeevan Mission.

"Work on the Jal Jeevan Mission will progress with great vigour in the years to come," Prime Minister Modi said in his Independence Day speech.

Why PM Modi’s I-Day speech focussed majorly on water crisis

Why PM Modi’s I-Day speech focussed majorly on water crisis
The water crisis engulfing India can be gauged from the fact that it became the centre of PM Modi's I-Day speech. He used the word 'water' 28 times.

Dipu Rai
New Delhi
August 17, 2019UPDATED: August 17, 2019 22:30 IST
PM Modi, independence day, india water crisis
Affordability of drinking water is a primary challenge in India and PM Modi regrets that "today, we all are actually buying water from grocery shops." (Photo: Reuters)
If water starts disappearing, nature's processes get disrupted and this initiates total destruction," Prime Minister Narendra Modi had quoted Tamil poet Thiruvalluvar in his Independence Day address to the nation.

Almost half the houses in this country do not have access to drinking water. The World Resources Institute (WRI) had recently come out with its global water risk atlas, where India is placed among 17 extremely high water-stressed countries

The water crisis engulfing India can be gauged from the fact that it became the centre of PM Modi's I-Day speech. He used the word 'water' 28 times.

Growing population and rapid urbanisation have widened the gap between demand and supply of water in India. According to Falkenmark Water Stress Indicator, if any citizen gets less than 1,700 cubic metres (m3) of water, it is counted as a water-stressed condition, while if per capita availability falls below 1,000 m3, it is termed as water scarcity.

India is about to move from water-stressed situation to water scarcity. According to the Working Group-II report of the Fourth Assessment of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, India has been designated as a 'water-stressed region' with current utilisable freshwater standing at 1,122 cubic meters (cu m) per year per capita.

Water resources are either polluted or depleted in India due to population explosion and climate change, especially in cities.

To fulfil water demands of the growing urban population, more and more groundwater is needed to be extracted, but options for replenishing it are minimal. Though 67 per cent groundwater used to get recharged during monsoon, concrete clusters have reduced this opportunity too. Heavy rains or floods are not as useful as earlier for groundwater replenishment.

Major river basins in the country, including Krishna, Cauvery, Subarnarekha, Pennar, Mahi, Sabarmati, Tapi, Luni, etc. come under the category of "water-scarce", with most of them having a per capita availability of water less than or around 500 m3.

Water security requires to safeguard water sources and forests, especially by way of protecting rivers from pollution and promoting reforestation, and improve agricultural practices.

Affordability of drinking water is a primary challenge in India and PM Modi regrets that "today, we all are actually buying water from grocery shops". He assured that water would be a human right.

On August 15, PM Modi had said, "I declare from the Red Fort today that in the days to come, we will take forward the 'Jal Jeevan Mission'. The central and state governments will work jointly on this mission. We have promised to spend more than Rs 3.5 lakh crore on this mission in the coming years."

PM Modi's Independence Day Address: Top 10 Quotes

PM Modi's Independence Day Address: Top 10 Quotes

Independence Day: "Our focus now is to build on 21st century India," PM Modi said in his address today.
All India | Edited by Ria Saini | Updated: August 15, 2019 15:36 IST
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PM Modi's Independence Day Address: Top 10 QuotesIndependence Day 2019: PM Modi addressed the nation on the 73rd Independence Day
NEW DELHI:  Prime Minister Narendra Modi today addressed the nation on the 73rd Independence Day. PM Modi led the nation in celebrating the event at the Red Fort in Delhi today morning. He unfurled the National Flag and delivered the customary address to the nation from the Red Fort at 7:30 am.
Here are the top 10 quotes from PM Modi's Independence Day address
My fellow Indians, greetings to you all on the occasion of India's 73rd Independence Day. While the nation celebrates today, we must think of people facing immense difficulities due to floods. Rescue teams are working round-the-clock to ensure that they are safe
With the new government that has come to power, we have strengthened the government machinery to ensure that we as a nation go ahead at a very fast pace
We have taken some very significant decisions in the first 10 weeks itself to ensure that the nation sees unhindered growth. The removal of Article 370, Article 35-A and ban on Triple Talaq have been important steps. We have fulfilled the dream that Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel had for India
Our focus now is to build on 21st century India--the way it moves forward, how it functions and how it thinks. It is time to fulfil the dreams and aspirations of people.
The betterment of lives of our brothers and sisters in Jammu and Kashmir and Ladakh is our collective responsibility as fellow countrymen
The spirit of "One Nation, One Constitution" has become a reality and India is proud of that
Today, the entire world faces the threat of terrorism. We must deal with it collectively. India will certainly do its bit to fight terrorism
India must move and grow at a fast pace and that is possible only when every Indian prospers. It is our responsibility to hold the hands of the poor
Population explosion will create difficulties for future generations. Those who follow plan small families contribute to development of the nation. This is also a form of patriotism.
India does not want incremental progress, it needs a high jump. Our thought process has to be expanded. We have to keep in mind global best practices and build good systems

Monday, October 28, 2019

EU Lawmakers In Kashmir Today As Opposition Questions Government

EU Lawmakers In Kashmir Today As Opposition Questions Government
The group is expected to visit the Army headquarters, where they will be briefed and they will have have lunch.
All India | Reported by Nazir Masoodi, Edited by Deepshikha Ghosh | Updated: October 29, 2019 11:38 IST
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The 27-member EU team met PM Modi in Delhi on Monday.


NEW DELHI/ SRINAGAR: A group of European Union MPs, which met Prime Minister Narendra Modi and National Security Adviser Ajit Doval on Monday, left for Jammu and Kashmir this morning amid questions raised by the opposition on the visit at a time politicians at home have been barred from the state amid heavy restrictions for nearly two months.
In the middle of the backlash, some of the lawmakers may have dropped out of the visit.

The MPs, drawn mainly from far right parties, are the first international visitors to Jammu and Kashmir since the government on August 5 announced the end of special status to the state under Article 370 and split it into two union territories. Only three of the 27 MPs belong to the Left or liberal parties. All of them are visiting India in their private capacity.

The group is expected to visit the Army headquarters, where they will be briefed and they are likely to have lunch.

The MPs will be taken to two hotels, where they are expected to meet traders, houseboat owners and state government officials. But Sheikh Ashiq, President, Kashmir Chamber Of Commerce and Industry

said he hadn't received any invite so far.

"It is a good opportunity for us to go into Kashmir as a foreign delegation and be able to see firsthand for ourselves what's happening on the ground," European Parliament member Nathan Gill told news agency ANI from the bus that took the MPs to the airport for their flight to Srinagar.

Thierry Mariani, a Euro MP for France's far-right National Rally, was quoted as telling Agence France-Presse (AFP), "we are going to see the situation in Kashmir, at least what they want to show us".

After their meeting with PM Modi yesterday, a statement from his office said, "Prime Minister, while welcoming the delegation to India, expressed the hope that they have a fruitful visit to various parts of the country, including to Jammu and Kashmir. Their visit to Jammu and Kashmir should give the delegation a better understanding of the cultural and religious diversity of the region of Jammu, Kashmir and Ladakh; apart from giving them a clear view of the development and governance priorities of the region."

Without naming Pakistan, PM Modi told the EU lawmakers that urgent action was required against all those who support or sponsor terror activities and use terrorism as a state policy.

The visit comes at a time the entire opposition mainstream in Kashmir, including three former chief ministers, remains in custody. Hundreds of politicians were detained in measures that included a complete communication lockdown in Jammu and Kashmir and massive curbs on movement after the Article 370 decision. Some of the restrictions have been softened since then.

Opposition leaders like Rahul Gandhi have raised many questions about the visit. The Congress leader, who was turned away from the Srinagar airport in August, tweeted: "MPs from Europe are welcome to go on a guided tour of Jammu and Kashmir while Indian MPs are banned and denied entry. There is something very wrong with that."

Another Congress MP, Shashi Tharoor, had termed the centre's decision as "an insult to democracy", party colleague Jairam Ramesh wondered what may have spurred the "chest-beating champion of nationalism" to take such a step.

COMMENT
AFP reported yesterday that the European parliament and European Union hierarchy were not involved in this visit. Several European embassies in Delhi were unaware of the visit until Monday, the agency reported. It also quoted an unnamed EU official in India as saying the visit was not official and the lawmakers had come at the invitation of an NGO.

Why Prakash Ambedkar’s Social Experiment Didn't Work

Maharashtra Polls: Why Prakash Ambedkar’s Social Experiment Didn't Work
Several VBA party workers allege that undeserving candidate were fielded in the assembly elections.

Maharashtra Polls: Why Prakash Ambedkar’s Social Experiment Didn't Work
Prakash Ambedkar campaigning in Maharashtra in October. Photo: Facebook/VBA

Sukanya Shantha
Sukanya Shantha
POLITICS
6 HOURS AGO

Mumbai: In March this year, senior political and anti-caste leader Prakash Ambedkar made an ambitious announcement. He said that his newly formed party, Vanchit Bahujan Aghadi (VBA), would field candidates on all 48 Lok Sabha seats in Maharashtra. The party – formed in the aftermath of the violence unleashed on the Dalit community visiting Pune’s Bhima Koregaon on January 1, 2018 – fielded most candidates belonging to Scheduled Castes, smaller backward castes and many from communities that have never been represented in the electoral political process.

At the end of this one-of-a-kind social experiment, the party managed an impressive 14% vote share or 41 lakh total votes. But this vote share did not convert into electoral success. Barring one candidate from then ally All India Majlis-e-Ittehad-ul-Muslimeen or AIMIM, who won with a thin margin from the Aurangabad constituency, VBA did not meet with any success.

Five months later, in October, the party once again contested on a whopping 242 seats in the state assembly elections. This time, the vote share had drastically come down from 41 lakh to 24 lakh votes, and not one seat was claimed.

“Secular” vs Bahujan politics

The Congress has alleged that the VBA is a spoiler and, in both elections, split votes that would have gone to other secular, non-BJP parties. They also alleged that the VBA was merely acting as the BJP’s “B- team” in the state and was there to only to dent Congress’s chance of winning.


Soon after the results were announced on October 24, messages began circulating on several pro-Congress WhatsApp groups, with the list of seats where the Congress and Nationalist Congress Party came second and the VBA polled a sizeable share. These messages claimed that the VBA had eaten into Congress and NCP’s votes. Ambedkar vehemently denies these charges.

Congress’s state spokesperson Sachin Sawant openly criticised Prakash Ambedkar for the coalition’s defeat on as many as 25 seats. Sawant said that Ambedkar was responsible for depriving the state of a secular government.


Sachin Sawant

@sachin_inc
वंचित बहुजन आघाडीने राज्यात धर्मनिरपेक्ष विचारांचे सरकार आणण्यापासून राज्याच्या जनतेला वंचित ठेवले. आघाडीच्या २५ जागा पाडल्या.
लोकसभेच्या निवडणुकीत ४१ लाख मतदान घेतले. यावेळी २४ लाख मते मिळाली म्हणजे १७ लाख लोकांचे डोळे आधीच उघडले होते. आता उरलेल्या २४ लाखांचे उघडले.
बाकी शून्य.. https://twitter.com/Prksh_Ambedkar/status/1187646912637177856 …

Prakash Ambedkar
@Prksh_Ambedkar
महाराष्ट्रातील सर्व मतदारांचे आभार !वंचित बहुजन आघाडीने विधानसभा निवडणुकीत चांगल्या पद्धतीने लढत  दिली.या निवडणुकीत वंचित बहुजन आघाडीने 24 लाखांपेक्षा जास्त मत मिळवली.त्याबद्दल सर्वांचे धन्यवाद.आपण जिंकू शकलो नाही,तरी 10 जागांवर दुसऱ्या क्रमांकाची मते घेतली आहेत.अनेक ठिकाणी आपण

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1:37 AM - Oct 26, 2019
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Similar allegations were also made soon after the Lok Sabha elections. But the numbers had indicated that the Congress had lost on at least 20 out of 48 seats with one lakh or more vote margins, and the VBA barely had a role to play in those constituencies.

Challenging Sawant’s claims, Ambedkar says, “One needs to take a closer look at the VBA’s performance. In at least 9-10 seats, VBA is on number two and has lost the chance of winning the seats only because of the Congress and NCP.” In the Akot constituency in Akola, for instance, where BJP candidate Prakash Bharsakale won with 48,586 votes, VBA’s candidate advocate Santosh Rahate had polled 41,326 votes and the Congress candidate was way behind with a mere 27,679 votes.

Similarly, in Akola’s Murtizapur constituency, VBA lost by a mere 1,910 votes to BJP’s Harish Pimpale. VBA’s candidate Pratibha Awachar had polled 57,617 votes, Pimpale got 59,527 votes and Congress’s Ravikumar Rathi had polled 41,000 votes. “For a newly formed party, each of these seats were valuable. The Congress and NCP were fully aware that we have a strong presence in these regions but they had still contested. If not for them, we would have managed to win these seats,” Ambedkar says.

Lack of resources

Yet, the VBA electoral performance in terms of seats won is less than inspiring. Looking back, Ambedkar says the party made a few “fatal mistakes”, along with several external factors led to this disastrous result.

“We are a community of zero or very little resources. Elections are an expensive affair. We were not able to raise the kind of resources that is essential to run for elections,” Ambedkar told The Wire.

Also read | Formula 2.5 for the CM’s Chair: What Aaditya Thackeray and T.S. Singhdeo Want

In the general elections, the funds were primarily raised from the community itself. At the end of every public rally, party volunteers would go around seeking donations and several people had come forward to donate for the cause. “So many supporters had donated their monthly incomes, several women had even handed over their gold ornaments to raise funds. It was an emotional moment for the Bahujan community. They saw a political possibility in the state and they were ready to push limits for the cause,” says Aakshay Bansode, a young party activist from Nanded district.

But a few months later, the enthusiasm had faded. Ambedkar attributes that to the weaker economic capacity of the community. “It was too early for the community to be able to make any donation. Last time itself several people had given a huge chunk and were no more able to make similar kinds of donations. And as a result, we were not able to reach out to our voters in several areas. Our poor reachability led to our defeat,” he adds.

Coalition with the Congress not an option

It is not like Ambedkar or other party leaders were unaware of their limited financial capabilities. Why, then, did the party not agree to a coalition with the Congress?


Ambedkar says, “The moment results were out and it was clear that (Shiv) Sena was better positioned, both Congress and the NCP were eager to reach out to the Sena. Both the Congress and the saffron parties claim to have radically different ideologies. Still, the Congress was ready to form a coalition with the Sena. How does one even enter into any kind of political arrangement with such a party?”

Ambedkar further adds that the movement that he aspires for is not just to claim political power. “We need to come in power but that would be done only on the basis of our ideology,” he claims.


Both during the general elections and later during the state assembly polls, Ambedkar had a talk with the Congress over an alliance. While the Congress claims to be keen in forging an alliance, it had offered VBA fewer seats that it asked for. Both times, the talks failed.

Kapil Rajhans, a senior college faculty at Kolhapur University and a political commentator, points to a “historical” pattern and says that the Ambedkarite politics has never been allowed to flourish in the state. “Most political parties have lost their relevance the moment they joined hands with the BJP or the Congress. Jogendra Kawade, Ramdas Athawale and many other Ambedkarite leaders have gone with these established parties. What happened to them? How many legislatures have they managed?” Rajhans asks.

Buddhists vs other marginalised communities

Ambedkar’s counter to the Congress’s allegation might even have some substance in it, but he can’t shy away from the writing on the wall. In most constituencies that The Wire had travelled to during elections, ground-level party cadre complained about a lack of clarity among the leadership. In most constituencies, karyakartas claimed that the parliamentary committee of the party had nominated candidates who had no ground presence.

“Just by posturing on social media, elections are not won,” said one senior leader of Ambedkar’s erstwhile party, BHARIP Bahujan Mahasangh. Several experienced party workers had stayed away from the campaigning process as a mark of protest, he claimed.

There have also been protests and resignations following the ticket distribution. Like in Hatkanangale constituency in Kolhapur, the VBA decided to field a lesser-known candidate, S.P. Kamble, and that led to mass resignations. Indrajit Kamble, a senior leader and a longtime supporter of BHARIP, decided to quit the party after he was denied the ticket. In this constituency, even traditional Buddhist voters boycotted the candidate and as a result S.P. Kamble polled a meagre 11,000 votes in this assembly election.

Also read | BJP’s Biggest Challengers Right Now Are the Dominant Agrarian Castes

Ambedkar’s decision to consciously keep Buddhist candidates away also cost the party dearly. “The community has always been more politically aware and supported the Ambedkarite movement. So this time, when VBA decided to go for candidates from other communities, the Ambedkarite Buddhist communities were miffed,” points out Somnath Waghmare, a PhD scholar at the Tata Institute of Social Sciences.

Unlike the Buddhist community, several OBC communities in the state are still more inclined towards the BJP and Sena. So even after the party decided to nominate candidates from these communities, it did not yield any results. Ambedkar, accepting this as one of the major failures, said, “There is a lot of work that needs to be done to overcome social barriers. There exists an acute sense of superiority among the OBC communities. They would attend VBA’s rallies but that did not convert into votes. A voter, in India, is willing to vote for a candidate above him in the caste ladder but not for someone below him. This has always the biggest challenge of an anti-caste political movement,” Ambedkar claims.

Attempt to criminalise the community

Along with the internal factors, Ambedkar says his party had to also fight the state’s clampdown on his party workers. Externment or tadipaar notices were issued to over 1,200 party workers in just Kolhapur district, and to several hundred across the state just two days before the elections.

“These notices were issued in relation with the Bhima Koregaon agitation last year. Even when chief minister Devendra Fadnavis had declared that he would be taking the cases back, he did not. Instead, he decided to victimise some important party workers just two days before the election. We were forced to stay away from the campaign,” said Dayasagar Kamble, one of the party workers from Nagaon who along with 30 others from his village was served with this notice.

The way forward

It is easier to mobilise a community at the time of elections. After this defeat, several party workers have expressed their dismay towards the movement. To this, Ambedkar says, “Of course the community is feeling discouraged with the results, but one can’t forget that this is also perhaps the only community that fights back irrespective of the result.”


Going forward, Ambedkar says the focus will have to be on bringing in a social synergy among different Bahujan communities, especially between the OBC and Dalit groups. “Unless the social barrier is erased, it will be difficult to fight a successful electoral battle,” he adds.

Saturday, October 26, 2019

VBA cost Cong-NCP alliance 23 seats, says NCP's Jitendra Awhad

VBA cost Cong-NCP alliance 23 seats, says NCP's Jitendra Awhad
By PTI

VBA cost Cong-NCP alliance 23 seats, says NCP's Jitendra Awhad   


Mumbai: A senior NCP leader on Friday claimed the Prakash Ambedkar-led Vanchit Bahujan Aghadi divided opposition votes in several seats resulting in victory to the BJP and the Shiv Sena.

In a tweet, Mumbra-Kalwa MLA Jitendra Awhad said, "Congress and NCP lost 12 and 11 seats because of VBA candidates ate our share of votes. The MIM candidates in Nagpur Central and Nanded north helped the BJP and Shiv Sena candidates to sail through a tough contest."

The VBA played a "crucial role" in helping BJP win some seats, which otherwise would have been in the Congress-NCP kitty, he said.

Poll data shows the VBA candidate from Ballarpur Assembly segment in Chandrapur district secured 39,958 votes, as against the Congress candidate's 52,762 votes, which allowed senior BJP minister Sudhir Mungantiwar to win by getting 86,002 votes.

In Shivajinagar Assembly segment in Pune, the VBA candidate got 10,442 votes, which allowed the BJP to win with a margin of around 5,000 votes.

However, there are also some seats where the VBA and the MIM ended up second.

Saturday, October 12, 2019

CPI (M)-BJP join hands against TMC for West Bengal panchayat polls

CPI (M)-BJP join hands against TMC for West Bengal panchayat polls
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CPI (M)-BJP join hands against TMC for West Bengal panchayat polls
West Bengal BJP chief Dilip Ghosh too admitted that supporters of the BJP and the CPI(M) were present at the rally. ANI file
Kolkata, May 8

Archrivals Bharatiya Janata Party and the Communist Party of India (Marxist) have joined hands at the grass-roots level in Nadia district to defeat the Trinamool Congress in the upcoming panchayat polls in West Bengal.

Maintaining that it was not a "formal seat-sharing adjustment", a district level CPI (M) leader said that the party had to opt for seat adjustment in many seats against the TMC.

The CPI (M), whose left ideology is at the opposite end of the spectrum from the right-leaning BJP, never loses an opportunity to describe the saffron party as a "divisive force".

The BJP's north Nadia district unit president termed the development as an "isolated incident".

The bonhomie first came to light in the last week of April when both the parties organised a joint protest rally in Karimpur-Ranaghat area of Nadia district against the alleged violence of the TMC during the panchayat poll process.



Cadre of both parties carried their respective flags during the protest programme.

CPI (M) Nadia district secretary and state committee member Sumit De agreed that there have been adjustments at the grass-root level in many seats as several villagers were in favour of a one-to-one fight.

It has nothing to do with the party's policy, he added.

"Yes, there have been adjustments at the grass-root level. In many seats as the villagers had wanted one-to-one fight, we had to respect it and act accordingly. But it is not that there have been several rounds of discussions between parties and it is a formal seat sharing adjustment," De told PTI.

Senior CPI (M) leader and state committee member Rama Biswas, who was present at the joint rally of the BJP and CPI (M), said that a rally had been taken out by villagers against the violence of the TMC.

West Bengal BJP president Dilip Ghosh too admitted that supporters of the BJP and the CPI(M) were present at the rally.   

"I have received information that we had called a rally against the violence of the TMC. CPI (M) workers also came and joined our protest rally as they too were attacked," Ghosh told PTI

A senior state BJP leader who did not wish to be named, said in areas where the BJP could not field a candidate "it has given enough hints to the voters and party cadres to counter the TMC that has unleashed violence".

Agreeing that such "isolated incidents" had taken place, the BJP north Nadia district president Mahadeb Sarkar told PTI: "In some seats where we could not field candidates, our workers at the grass-root level have extended support to independent candidates".

"In most cases, these independent candidates are actually CPI (M) workers", he said.

In several gram panchayat seats of Nadia-Karimpur area, BJP candidates were asked to withdraw their nominations so that the CPI (M) could fight against the TMC and vice-versa, a district BJP leader said.

In those seats, the party (either CPI (M) or BJP) that has not fielded any candidate is campaigning for the other one to defeat the TMC, the BJP leader of Nadia's Karimpur area, who did not wish to be named, said.

CPI (M) central committee leader Sujan Chakraborty said few "isolated incidents" should not to used to judge the CPI (M)'s political line against BJP.

"We are the only party in India that has the most clear approach against BJP and its communal policies. We are not like the TMC, which is not serious about fighting BJP. Our policies should not be judged based on isolated incidents. In panchayat poll such isolated incidents do happen. You will find it in other parties also", Chakraborty said.

The TMC claimed that the political development in Nadia only proves that the BJP and the CPI (M) are having a "tacit understanding in Bengal".

"We are not surprised at this development as we were aware of such developments in various districts. Only the TMC is serious about fighting the BJP and its anti-people policies," TMC secretary general Partha Chatterjee said.

According to West Bengal State Election Commission (SEC) sources, of the 48,650 seats in 3,358 gram panchayats, 16,814 were uncontested and of the 9,217 seats in 341 panchayat samitis, 3,059 were uncontested.

In the 20 zilla parishads, 203 of the 825 seats were uncontested, they said.

Communists who once sided with BJP now irked over no alliance with Congress in West Bengal

Communists who once sided with BJP now irked over no alliance with Congress in West Bengal

With a chequered history, where the Left Front had ‘aligned’ with the BJP, it is impossible for the CPM cadre to adjust themselves with the Congress.
KUMAR KETKAR 25 March, 2019 12:59 pm IST
Rahul Gandhi at the press conference | Praveen Jain/ThePrint
File photo of Rahul Gandhi at a press conference in Congress headquarters in New Delhi |

Praveen Jain / ThePrint


The fact that the prospects of a Congress-CPM alliance in West Bengal couldn’t even reach the discussion table has apparently irked many people, including some Communists.

An old comrade I met a couple of days ago was agitated at the development and blamed the Congress for being ‘inflexible, uncompromising, stubborn’. He used several other synonyms to that effect and, then rhetorically wondered if the Congress has become a B-team of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), with soft Hindutva as its ideological identity!


He then waxed more eloquent to say that the Grand Old Party was facing extinction. “There is no need for Narendra Modi to work towards making a “Congress-Mukt Bharat”. The Congress party, from top to bottom, is in a self-destructive mode. Despite knowing it faces oblivion, it does not want to sacrifice even a few seats to the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) or to the Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) or to the Communist Party Marxist (CPM). With this arrogance and adamance, the Congress is inviting electoral disaster,” he said, displaying a rather strange concern for the Congress.

He created a very depressing and grim picture of the Congress and its president Rahul Gandhi’s leadership. That mood enveloped the discussion for a while. So I just casually asked the self-righteous comrade a very simple question. “May I know why the CPM has been miserably routed in West Bengal and wiped out in Tripura?” Doesn’t it face extinction too?”

Also read: The party is over and there isn’t much left of the Left in India

The CPM was in power for 34 straight years in West Bengal – from 1977 to 2000 (under Jyoti Basu) and then from 2000 to 2011 (when Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee was the chief minister). But in a political tsunami of sorts, the CPM was thrown out of power by Mamata Banerjee’s still young Trinamool Congress. Since then, the CPM has not been able to rise from the ashes. All the musclemen in Bengal went over to Mamata Banerjee’s TMC. The CPM today says that they are the victims of these ‘thugs’.

So, I asked my old committed comrade: “Why, after nearly 34 years, were you so hated by the same electorate that elected you election after election from 1977?” I was not being sarcastic, just curious. Here was his reply: “It is all because of the Congress backing Naxals to attack the CPM cadre in the mid ’70s. Later, the musclemen also helped them do so.” He alleged many of his party comrades were murdered by “Mamata’s armed gangs backed by the Congress”.


It is not, however, as simple as that. The CPM, or rather the Communists in West Bengal, have always been anti-Congress, even during Jawaharlal Nehru’s days. In 1962, when the India-China war broke out, a large number of Bengali comrades were overtly supportive of the Chinese position. The united Communist Party of India (CPI) witnessed cracks over the issue of China versus Soviet Union. The party finally split in 1964.

The so-called Dange faction, led by veteran leader Shripad Amrit Dange, supported the Congress under Jawaharlal Nehru and the Soviet Union. The Ranadive faction, led by Dange’s rival B.T. Ranadive, was pro-China and opposed to both Nehru and the Congress. After the split, the Ranadive faction became the CPM and established its hegemony in West Bengal. Since then, the CPM has consistently and stridently taken an anti-Congress position.

The CPM’s anti-Congressism helped the party come to power, first briefly in 1967, when Jyoti Basu became the deputy chief minister and Ajoy Mukherjee of the breakaway Bangla Congress the chief minister. The coalition collapsed as the extreme radical group in the party became Naxalites under the leadership of Charu Mazumdar, and Indira Gandhi emerged as the powerful leader at the Centre after the Congress party split in 1969.

When the Congress came to power in West Bengal under the leadership of Siddharth Shankar Ray in 1972, the hostility between the CPM and the Congress took a violent turn. The Dange-led CPI supported Indira Gandhi, even during the Emergency. When the Janata Party was formed in 1977, the CPM supported it and came to power in West Bengal, which it would go on to enjoy for the next three decades.

By then, the CPI had joined the CPM-led Left Front. So, all comrades were now following the anti-Congressism as a doctrine, which was formulated by Ram Manohar Lohia. So, who is really responsible for the current scenario where the CPM and the Congress are unable to enter the mahagathbandhan (grand alliance)?

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In 1989, the Left Front had joined hands (euphemistically described as floor management) with the BJP to corner Rajiv Gandhi and the Congress on the issue of Bofors. And again in 2008, the ‘Saffrons’ and the ‘Reds’ came together to oppose the Indo-US nuclear deal. But the loser in the alliance game was the Left. In 2004, the Left Front had 61 MPs. In 2009, that number came down to 32. By the time the 2014 Lok Sabha election results were out, the Left Front’s strength had fallen to 12.

With this chequered history, it is impossible for the CPM cadre to adjust themselves with the Congress. But somehow, they came together in the 2016 assembly election with an aim to defeat their common enemy, Mamata Banerjee. But the CPM-Congress alliance in the state did not help the Left. And now, the CPM considers the Trinamool Congress its enemy number one in West Bengal. For the Congress, Modi-led BJP is the main target.

Now, in the Lok Sabha election, the fight is at the Centre, not the state. Mamata Banerjee and the Congress are both out to defeat Narendra Modi. But the Congress also wants to defeat the Trinamool. And the CPM wants to defeat all of them. It presents a complex political algebra, where all four parties are against each other.

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For the CPM-led Left Front, it is not possible to be a part of the mahagathbandhan wherein the Congress is a major member. Mamata Banerjee too cannot join the grand alliance as she herself harbours prime ministerial ambitions. Another complicated contradiction is Kerala, where the CPM’s main rival is the Congress. Therefore, at the national level, the Congress-CPM alliance would give confusing signals to the cadre. And that’s why the CPM prefers to go it alone.


The committed comrade could not solve this riddle and hence preferred to blame the Congress for not being flexible and compromising. All opposition parties want a ‘Congress-mukt’ polity and yet want Rahul Gandhi to take the lead in establishing the mahagathbandhan. For the Congress, with such friends or partners, there is no need for an enemy.

The author is a former editor and Congress member of Rajya Sabha.