• ‘Don’t care’: Adhir as TMC eyes 42 seats in West Bengal
    Indian Express | 22 January 2024
  • Days after the TMC hinted at planning to contest all 42 Lok Sabha seats in West Bengal, state Congress unit president Adhir Ranjan Chowdhury said that he didn’t care about what the INDIA bloc partner thought and knew how to fight and win.

    Speaking to reporters in Siliguri Saturday, the Baharampur MP said, “I don’t care about anyone. Our leaders have already spoken. I have reached here (being a five-time MP) only by contesting and winning. We know how to contest and win,” said Chowdhury.

    Chowdhury has been a five-time Congress MP from Baharampur since 1999. “My priority is to contest the election and win. I don’t care what others think and that’s how I have worked in my political career. I know that I have to fight and win,” he said.

    The sharp reaction from the Congress leader came days TMC chief Mamata Banerjee told her party workers that they should gear up to contest all the 42 Lok Sabha seats in West Bengal, including the three seats in Murshidabad district — Jangipur, Murshidabad and Baharampur.

    In the 2019 Lok Sabha polls, the TMC won 22 seats, the BJP bagged 18 seats and the Congress won 2 seats in Bengal. While Chowdhury won from the Baharampore seat, Abu Hasem Khan Choudhury, a former Union minister, won from the Malda Dakshin constituency.

    According to sources in the party, during a closed-door meeting in Murshidabad district on Friday, Banerjee reportedly told TMC workers, “If you all fight unitedly, you can defeat Adhir Chowdhury.”

    The TMC, Congress and the Left Front are part of the INDIA bloc, which is opposed to the BJP.

    Reacting to Chowdhury’s statements, TMC state general secretary Kunal Ghosh said, “The state unit of Congress is attacking TMC in Bengal. By doing so, it is giving oxygen to the BJP. We are ready to contest all 42 seats. The Congress should talk about seat-sharing on the basis of ground reality. However, they are indulging in politics of pressure. TMC alone can contest and win the election.

  • Link to this news (Indian Express)