• CPM rides INDIA divide in Bengal, joins Rahul Gandhi's Bharat Jodo Nyay Yatra
    Telegraph | 2 February 2024
  • The Bengal CPM, visibly upbeat after arch-adversary Mamata Banerjee’s repeated public assertions of a virtual withdrawal from the INDIA grouping, on Thursday joined Rahul Gandhi in his Murshidabad leg of the Nyay Yatra.

    A day after Mamata accused the Marxists of using their influence on the Congress to spoil her “good understanding” with it, the CPM mocked her, underscoring its oft-repeated prediction that she would abandon the anti-BJP bloc before the general election.

    Through vast stretches of the Murshidabad route of the Yatra, CPM flags were brandished alongside those of the Congress and the national flag, while Trinamul jeered at the Marxists for their alleged desperation.

    The Congress high command, taking a line at odds with its Bengal unit, yet again issued a statement of optimism — of being able to retain Mamata in the INDIA coalition and sealing a seat deal in Bengal.

    The CPM state committee, led by state secretary Md Salim and central committee member Sujan Chakraborty, met Rahul and his Yatra entourage at Piyarapur in Murshidabad, vowing to stand by nyay (justice) in the fight against the division of the nation through onyay (injustice).

    “We are not here to discuss the alliance but to offer our wholehearted support to this endeavour. Alliance talks will take place in party offices,” a beaming Salim said.

    He made no attempt to conceal his pleasure at the Bengal chief minister’s recent declarations about going it alone in the state in the general election, and her unwillingness to participate in the Yatra despite repeated requests from the Congress high command.

    “Mamata has been firing her gun at the Congress, off our shoulders…. Everybody got on the (INDIA) train, but we cannot guarantee who will get off where,” Salim said.

    “Mamata Banerjee has now, unsurprisingly, said, ‘Stop the train, I will disembark’. We are saying, ‘You are welcome to’.”

    On Wednesday at Berhampore
    in Murshidabad, Mamata had said: “We had a good understanding with the
    Congress… if somebody played foul, it was the CPM. The CPM is today the biggest
    agent of the BJP.”

    Over
    the past few days, Mamata has repeatedly accused the CPM of getting in the way
    of her alliance talks with the Congress, often underscoring how the CPM was
    encouraging a negative approach towards her within the INDIA grouping.

    The
    Trinamul chief’s displeasure at the delay in sealing seat shares has been
    exacerbated by the state Congress’s attacks on her and its attempts to drive a
    hard bargain, besides the relentless, militant opposition to her from the CPM.

    This
    has, however, coincided with an increasingly placatory approach from a Congress
    high command cornered by the serious setbacks handed by the AAP and the body
    blow dealt by the JDU’s departure.

    Throughout
    the Nyay Yatra, and not only in the
    Bengal leg, Rahul has spoken well of Mamata or at least avoided publicly
    criticising her despite the attacks from the Bengal chief minister. But his
    party’s state unit has been belligerently returning the fire.

    Congress
    general secretary (communications) Jairam Ramesh, who has over the past few
    days been consistently mollycoddling Mamata, refused to budge from his —
    effectively, the high command’s — optimism about eventually pulling off a
    seat-sharing arrangement with her in Bengal.

    This
    despite her assertion on Wednesday that she was now willing to offer none of
    the state’s 42 Lok Sabha seats to the Congress.

    “In
    an alliance, dynamics of give and take exist. We remain hopeful of arriving at
    a consensus on a joint seat-sharing formula in the state, one that is
    satisfactory to all parties involved,” Ramesh, part of Rahul’s entourage, said
    at Jangipur.

    “Mamataji
    has, on several occasions, expressed her commitment to INDIA, and we welcome
    this.”

    Asked
    about Mamata’s refusal to offer even a single seat to the Congress in Bengal on
    account of its alignment with the CPM, which she
    says would strengthen the BJP’s chances in the state, Ramesh said he had heard
    about this.

    “It
    reflects her opinion, not the consensus of the bloc. Trinamul and the Congress
    have the common goal of defeating the BJP…. The shared objective — of paramount
    importance to all INDIA constituents — is to oust the BJP,” he said.

    “In
    Bengal, we have to ensure that the BJP is defeated in the 18 seats it won in
    2019,” he added.

    In
    response to the CPM’s refusal to ally with Mamata in Bengal, Ramesh said that
    representatives of the Marxists and all other major Left parties had been part
    of every major INDIA exercise, alongside Trinamul and the Congress.

    Sources
    in not just Trinamul but also the Congress high command believe that the biggest
    hurdle to a settlement in Bengal is the militant resistance from state Congress
    chief Adhir Chowdhury, backed by party general secretary and working committee
    member Deepa Das Munshi.

    While
    Mamata on Thursday reiterated her go-it-alone stand in Nadia, Trinamul state
    general secretary Kunal Ghosh — widely seen as a mouthpiece of her nephew and
    heir apparent
    Abhishek Banerjee — ridiculed the CPM.

    “The
    CPM, which is fussing over pictures with Rahul Gandhi today, had called his
    grandmother (Indira Gandhi) a witch; cartoons of Rahul’s father (Rajiv Gandhi)
    had been used as graffiti, calling him a thief. They had also joined hands with
    the BJP to oust him (Rajiv, in 1989),” Ghosh said in a Bengali post on X.

    “Now
    if you (the CPM) fight alone, your deposits will be forfeited in all 42 seats;
    that is why the CPM is roaming around greedily, like a madman.”
  • Link to this news (Telegraph)