Rift between old-timers and new entrants cause of concern for Bengal BJP ahead of polls | India News – Times of India

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KOLKATA: With assembly polls just three weeks away, the BJP, amid an all-out effort to oust Mamata Banerjee from power in Bengal, is also struggling to keep its house in order, as old-timers and new entrants engage in feud over multiple issues, including ticket distribution.
The saffron party, which had witnessed unprecedented growth in terms of vote share and mass base over the last few years, had opened its doors wide open for leaders from other parties, as part of its poll strategy, but that did not go down well with many senior leaders, who had once locked horns with the newbies from rival camps, sources in the BJP said.
According to a senior BJP leader, the strategy had initially reaped dividends for the saffron camp, which labelled the TMC as a “sinking ship”, but it eventually led to infighting within the organisation and diluted the party’s “fight against corruption”, as several new entrants were found to have graft charges against them.
The party recently did a course correction, and stopped the mass induction, but the damage by then was done, with the leadership now having to face the “herculean task” of identifying suitable candidates from 8,000 aspirants for the state’s 294 constituencies, the senior leader said.
“We never thought that induction of leaders from other parties could lead to such a situation. Every day we hear reports of infighting between the old-timers and newcomers. We apprehend that post announcement of names (of contenders), discontentment within the camp will grow further,” the BJP leader noted.
State BJP chief Dilip Ghosh, however, insisted that expanding the party’s base was necessary at this juncture.
“The BJP is a big family. When your family grows, such incidents do take place. If we don’t take people from other outfits, how will we grow? That said, everyone has to abide by the rules and regulations of the party. No one is above the party,” Ghosh said.
Elections in Bengal, poised to be a stiff contest between the TMC and the BJP, will be held in eight phases, beginning with polling for 30 seats on March 27. Votes will be counted on May 2.
According to the saffron camp sources, many state leaders and the RSS — the BJP’s ideological parent – have aired their displeasure over induction of certain leaders from other parties.
Thousands of activists from rival parties joined the saffron camp in the last few months during the ‘jogdan mela’ (joining programme) in various districts of the state.
As many as 28 MLAs, including 19 from the TMC, and a sitting MP of the ruling camp have switched over to the BJP over the past few months. Prominent among them are heavyweight politicians and former TMC leaders Suvendu Adhikari and Rajib Banerjee, Sovan Chatterjee and Jitendra Tiwari.
Discontentment in the saffron camp, which had been brewing for a while, first surfaced in September last year, when veteran leader Rahul Sinha was replaced by Anupam Hazra, a former TMC MP, as national secretary.
Sinha openly spoke about the “injustice meted out to him to make space for leaders from the TMC”.
Union Minister Babul Supriyo and other BJP leaders, including state general secretary Sayantan Basu and state Mahila Morcha chief Agnimitra Paul, had in December opposed Tiwari’s induction into the party.
The state BJP leadership had then issued show-cause notices to Basu and Paul for speaking on the issue in public. Tiwari was taken into the saffron fold earlier this week.
Several BJP old-timers across the state had objected to the induction of former state minister Syamaprasad Mukherjee, ex-TMC MP Dasharath Tirkey, and rival camp leaders Sukra Munda and Mihir Goswami.
In certain pockets, BJP supporters have also come up with posters, which stated that local leaders would prefer backing an Independent candidate to supporting “parachuted leaders from the TMC”.
“Old-timers are worried that new entrants from the TMC would hog all the limelight and the efforts put in by them to strengthen the party would go in vain. They are apprehensive that they might not get due recognition, and tickets could slip out of hand,” another senior state BJP leader said.
“In East Midnapore, there are 16 seats. Adhikari might pitch for his loyalists who have followed in his footsteps and joined the BJP. The same could happen in Howrah, where Rajib Banerjee wields considerable influence.
“If you accommodate them, old-timers will get angry; if you don’t, the loyalists will get infuriated. It’s a precarious situation,” the BJP leader said.
Political analysts feel that a lack of strong leadership and over-dependence on central leadership might put the saffron party at a disadvantage.
“Once the candidate list is out, it will lead to massive infighting. If the BJP fails to control this situation, it will be Achilles heels for the saffron camp,” political analyst Biswanath Chakraborty asserted
Echoing him, another political pundit, Suman Bhattacharya, said induction of “tainted leaders” from the TMC has diluted the BJP’s main poll plank – ‘fight against corruption’.
“The BJP, which had been levelling corruption allegations against TMC leaders, ended up welcoming some of them into the party. This has put a question mark on the BJP’s credibility as an alternative to the TMC,” he added.
The TMC leadership — at the receiving end of the exodus — contended that only “rotten elements” have left the party to join the BJP.
“The saffron camp has turned into a dustbin of the TMC. It is good riddance for us,” TMC secretary-general Partha Chatterjee said.
The opposition CPM claimed that the switchovers only go on to prove that the BJP and the TMC are “two sides of the same coin”.
Making light of the claims, BJP national general secretary Kailash Vijayvargiya said the BJP is the largest party in the country, and knows well how to tackle such “minor issues”.
“People of Bengal have made up their mind to oust the TMC. These instances (of infighting) are minor hiccups, and we know how to tackle it. It won’t be an issue in the long run,” he said.

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Rally of Left-Congress-ISF’s 3rd Alternative Calls for ‘Janhit Sarkar’; to Do Away With ‘Communal BJP, TMC’

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After a decade of losing power, the Left Front, in alliance with the Congress and the newly formed Indian Secular Front (ISF) on Sunday projected itself as a “third alternative force” in the emerging TMC versus BJP political binary in West Bengal, but chinks were evident in the nascent alliance. The Left-Congress-ISF alliance kicked off its campaign for the upcoming assembly elections in West Bengal with a mega rally at the Brigade Parade Ground in Kolkata.

At the rally, leaders of the CPI(M)-headed Left Front called for “knocking out the communal TMC and BJP, and stressed the need for a third alternative to provide a “Janhit Sarkar” (people’s welfare government) to ensure employment generation and usher in industrial development in the state. State Congress president Adhir Chowdhury said that the grand alliance of the Left-Congress and other secular forces won’t let the West Bengal assembly elections to be a two- cornered contest and would defeat both the ruling Trinamool Congress and the opposition BJP.

However, a discordant note was sounded by ISF chief Abbas Siddiqui who, unhappy with the progress of seat-sharing talks with the Congress, issued a veiled threat to the party. Siddiqui vowed to defeat the TMC and the BJP and ensure that the Mamata Banerjee-led party becomes a “zero” after the assembly elections, but in a word of caution for the Congress, with which the party’s talks are in choppy waters, said that the ISF is here to become a partner and get its rightful claims.

The TMC and the BJP slammed the Left and the Congress accusing them of surrendering before a “communal force” like the ISF. Accusing the ruling TMC and the opposition BJP of dividing people on communal lines to serve their political interests, West Bengal CPI(M) secretary Surya Kanta Mishra said that the state needs a government that would work for its development and would not be a “copycat” of the TMC and the BJP.

“Both the TMC and the BJP are two sides of the same coin. They plan to divide people on communal lines and rule.We have seen how TMC leaders are joining the BJP lock, stock and barrel.

Except for the chief minister and some other leaders, the rest have switched over to the BJP. Both the TMC and the BJP now stand unmasked. We, the Left along with the Congress, would provide an alternative to people,” Mishra said. He said that the state needs a government that can take up industrialisation and generate employment for youths both in government and the private sectors.

CPI(M) general secretary Sitaram Yechury said that the Trinamool Congress has to be defeated first to stop the communal bandwagon of the RSS-BJP and claimed that the TMC might rejoin the NDA to form the government in West Bengal in case of a hung assembly. “Many people ask me what we would do in case of a hung assembly. I tell them to direct their question to the TMC as they are in the best position to answer it.

“The TMC has been part of the NDA (for several years) since 1998. It was part of the NDA government (at the Centre).In case of a hung assembly, I am confident that the TMC would join hands with the BJP to form the state’s government,” he said.

Terming the ongoing political tussle between the TMC and the BJP as a “mock fight”, Yechury alleged that the saffron party is using money from the PM CARES fund, set up to fight the COVID-19 pandemic, to “buy” leaders during the time of elections. “Our call is we want a Janhit Sarkar in Bengal for its overall development and protection of the rights of the masses,” he said.

CPI(M) politburo member Mohammed Salim said that the grand alliance would give a “knock out” punch to the communal TMC and the BJP. “We are fighting for changing the situation in Bengal, and some people are busy changing sides. Those who looted public money in chit fund scams are now switching parties. If we are voted to power, we will auction properties of corrupt leaders to return the looted money,” he said.

The Left Front ruled the state for 34 years since 1977 and its government was ousted by the TMC in 2011. Addressing the rally, state Congress president Adhir Chowdhury asserted that the massive gathering proved that the election will not be a two-cornered contest.

“Morning is the harbinger of the day, and this meeting proves that both the TMC and the BJP will be defeated in the coming election. The goal of the grand alliance is to ensure the victory of secularism and democracy and to defeat communal and repressive politics in Bengal,” he said. “In Delhi, the BJP talks of getting rid of the opposition. In Bengal, the TMC talks of opposition free elections. The BJP and the TMC want that other than the two, there should not exist any other political force in Bengal and no other party should come between them, he said.

ISF president Siddiqui asserted that people of West Bengal would teach Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee “a lesson for her arrogance” and ensure that her party becomes politically insignificant after elections. The ISF was floated by Siddiqui, an influential Muslim cleric of Hooghly district’s Furfura Sharif last month.

“We don’t want appeasement. We want our rightful claims, just like any other citizen of this country. We too have equal rights,” Siddiqui said. The BJP often accuses the TMC of appeasing Muslims for vote bank politics.

Expressing his gratitude for the West Bengal Left Front chairman Biman Bose for accommodating his fledgeling party in the grand alliance by sharing 30 seats, Siddiqui said that ISF activists and supporters will fight until the last to ensure the Left Front’s victory and its allies in various parts of the state. However, he said, “I didn’t speak about the Congress.

I am here (in politics) to be a partner, not for any kind of appeasement. I am here to get my rightful claims.” The ruling TMC and the opposition BJP slammed the Left’s brigade rally and accused them of surrendering before a “communal force” like ISF. The TMC claimed that the Left has surrendered before a communal force like the ISF.

“It is now proved that both the Left and the BJP are communal forces. The TMC is the only secular party,” senior TMC leader Firhad Hakim said. Alleging that the Brigade rally was sponsored by the TMC, BJP leaders said that both the Left and the Congress would fail to make their presence felt in the elections.

The Election Commission of India had on Friday announced an eight-phase poll in West Bengal, which will commence on March 27 and conclude on April 29. Counting will be held on May 2.



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‘Are Poll Dates Announced As Per Modi’s Suggestion?’: Mamata Questions 8-phase Bengal Elections

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Questioning the eight-phase assembly elections in West Bengal, Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee on Friday said she suspects the dates were announced as per the suggestions of Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Home Minister Amit Shah for better management of the BJP’s poll campaign.

Addressing a press conference at her residence in Kalighat, Banerjee said the Election Commission should not look at the state “through the eyes of the saffron camp” — a reference to the BJP.

“With all due respect to the Election Commission, I want to say that questions are being raised on why elections will be held in so many phases in Bengal while other states will be voting in one phase. If EC doesn’t provide justice to the people, where will the people go,” she said, adding that despite “all these tricks”, she will win the elections.

”I have information from my sources that the poll dates are similar to the ones BJP wanted. Have the dates been announced as per the suggestions of Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Home Minister Amit Shah? The PM and the home minister cannot misuse their power for the state elections,” she added.

Banerjee said she is the daughter of the state and knows Bengal better than the BJP, exuding confidence about her party Trinamool Congress winning the elections.

The first phase of polling in West Bengal will be on March 27, the second phase on April 1, the third phase on April 6 and the fourth on April 10. The fifth, sixth, seventh and eighth phases will be held on April 17, April 22, April 26 and April 29, respectively.

The EC will appoint two special observers for Bengal and a third can also be sent if required, said Chief Election Commissioner Sunil Arora in response to queries on whether enough arrangements are in place for the polls in the state where many have been raising questions about political violence.

Responding to questions on the increased number of phases in Bengal, Arora said when the EC assesses the law and order situation, it is based on several factors. “After all the elections to West Bengal (assembly) in 2016 was in seven phases. The Lok Sabha was in seven phases. So, seven to eight (phases) is not such a big deal because we also have to see the movement of forces, we also have to see the current charges and counter-charges (by political parties),” he said.

“We have to kind of find a way out. That is why we are sending two expenditure observers to Tamil Nadu and two police observers to West Bengal,” he explained.



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Mamata Banerjee Commute to and from West Bengal Secretariat on Electric Scooter to Protest Fuel Price Hike

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In a unique style of protest against fuel price hike, West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee on Thursday commuted to and from state secretariat Nabanna on an electric scooter. While on way to Nabanna in the morning, Banerjee was seen riding pillion on the battery-powered electric scooter driven by minister Firhad Hakim.

TMC supremo herself took the driver’s seat on way back to her residence in Kalighat area from secretariat in the afternoon. With a placard protesting against the petrol price hike hanging around her neck, helmet-clad Banerjee waved at people on both sides of the road during the seven-km-long journey from Hazra More to the state secretariat in the first half.

On return, the CM, however, decided to drive the vehicle herself at a slow speed with Hakim and some security personnel following her on foot. She drove the e-scooter till Rabindra Sadan-Exide Crossing when Hakim took it from her again. But, as the scooter entered Harish Mukherjee road, Banerjee was once again on the driving seat till reaching home.

During return she took a different route passing through Vidyasagar setu-A J C Bose Road-Harish Mukherjee Road-Hazra to her home. In the morning after reaching Nabanna following a 45- minute ride, Banerjee slammed the BJP-led government at the Centre saying, “We are protesting against the fuel price hike.

The Modi government only makes false promises. They have done nothing to bring down fuel prices. “You can see the difference in petrol prices when the Modi government came to power and now.” She said the TMC will launch a stir against fuel price rise from Friday.

With the state elections not too far, the TMC supremo is not missing any opportunity to score over her main rival BJP. Polls to 294-member West Bengal assembly are due in April-May this year.

“The BJP had promised free LPG connections to the people before coming to power and now they are hiking its price,” Banerjee said. “Modi and Shah are selling the country. They are selling the profit-making PSUs. This is an anti-people, anti-woman, anti-youth, anti-farmer government,” she said.

The feisty TMC chief also criticised the BJP government for renaming the Sardar Patel Stadium, popularly known as the Motera stadium, in Ahmedabad after Prime Minister Narendra Modi. “The way they are changing the names of stadiums, who knows they might change the name of the country in the coming days,” she quipped.

Speaking on her unique way of protest, Banerjee said, “I rode on an e-scooter to protest the manner in which petrol, diesel and LPG prices are rising. “A middle-class household needs two LPG cylinders a month which they can’t afford now. Over 1 crore people in our state also depend on kerosene which they are not getting now,” she said.

The chief minister was trailed by security personnel on other two-wheelers and two hired yellow taxis as other vehicles followed her a little distance away. There was tight security along the Hazra-Exide-AJC Bose Road-Vidyasagar Setu route.

Curious onlookers stood alongside the route of Vidyasagar Setu, A J C Bose Road and Asutosh Mukherjee Road to have a glimpse of Banerjee driving the scooter. The opposition parties, however, called her protest an “election stunt”.

“The CM is resorting to novel theatrics ahead of the elections but the state government is not doing its bit to reduce fuel prices,” BJP leader Jai Prakash Majumder said. Congress Legislature Party leader Abdul Mannan said, “This is nothing but an election stunt. Why is the state government not substantially withdrawing cess to blunt the effect of the fuel price hike to help the common man?” Left Front leader Sujan Chakraborty compared her fuel hike protest with her earlier riding pillion on a motorcycle driven by former PCAPA leader Chhatradhar Mahato during the Lalgarh agitation.

“Banerjee had ridden pillion on Chhatradhar Mahato’s motorcycle in the Jangalmahal region before coming to power in the state but later people of that region witnessed the TMC’s intimidation and terror,” he said.



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Abbas Siddiqui’s Indian Secular Front Likely to Pose Tough Fight For Mamata Banerjee in Nandigram

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Kolkata: In yet another political twist in West Bengal, Abbas Siddiqui — one of the strong Muslim clerics in West Bengal and founder of the Indian Secular Front (ISF) — is likely to field a candidate against Trinamool Congress chief and Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee from Nandigram in East Midnapore in the upcoming 2021 Assembly polls.

Nandigram is a crucial seat as Banerjee came to power in 2011 riding the wave of anti-land acquisition movements in Nandigram and Singur. That is why the BJP and the Congress-Left Front-ISF alliance is trying to corner the chief minister in this seat with a strong anti-incumbency message.

While BJP is yet to finalise its candidate sources said the Congress-Left Front-ISF have decided to field a strong ISF candidate. Speaking to the News18.com, Abbas Siddiqui’s brother and chairman of ISF Naushad Siddiqui said, “Yes, talks are going on between us and the Left-Congress alliance to field ISF candidate against Mamata Banerjee from prestigious Nandigram seat.”

When asked when they are going to organise a ‘mega public rally’ in Nandigram, he said, “In coming 10-15 days, we will hold the mega rally and before that all the formalities will be done as far fielding our candidate is concern. Talks are still going on and we will announce it officially soon.”

Siddiqui is an influential cleric of Furfura Sharif Darbar Hooghly district’s Jangipara. His decision to contest the 2021 state elections could be a worry for Banerjee as it will inevitably divide the Muslim vote share.

Also read: Why Mamata Banerjee’s Nandigram Move is a Strong Message for Her Detractors

On January 18, Banerjee played a masterstroke, declaring she will contest from Nandigram (as well as Bhowanipur seats) in the upcoming assembly poll in 2021.

Then, addressing a huge public rally at Tekhali in Nandigram, she said, “Nandigram is close to my heart. I can forget my name but I cannot forget Nandigram. Considering the emotional attachment I have with the people of Nandigram, today I am announcing that I wish to contest the upcoming poll from Nandigram.”

With more than a 31 percent vote share, the Muslim vote is undeniably a deciding factor for any political party in West Bengal.

It was a deciding factor during the Left rule till Banerjee came to power in 2011. She knows very well that any significant division in the Muslim vote share – a deciding factor in nearly 90 Assembly segments out of 294 Assembly seats in the state – could jeopardise her mission 2021 Assembly polls.

In 2019 Lok Sabha, Bengal witnessed a polarised voting pattern. The BJP had openly played the Hindu card, while the TMC banked on the Muslims. Such was the polarisation that even the Matuas (strong supporters of TMC) voted for BJP for raising the citizenship issue.

While the polarisation came as a concern for TMC (as Hindu votes are shying away towards BJP), Abbas Siddqui’s 2021 Assembly poll debut in Bengal, could be a boon for BJP due to inevitable division in Muslim vote share.

In 2019, TMC got 43 per cent votes (despite losing 12 seats) which is 5 per cent more (because of Muslim support) as compare to 2014 Lok Sabha. In 2014, TMC got 34 seats, while in 2019 it managed to secure only 22 seats.

Also read: ‘Contest Only From Nandigram’: BJP Challenges Mamata Banerjee, TMC Hits Back

On the other hand, in 2016 Assembly BJP’s vote share was 12 percent and in 2019 Lok Sabha it went up to 39 percent. There was an increase of 27 percent vote share mainly because of Hindus coalescing towards the BJP.

In West Bengal, nearly 22 percent Muslims lives in Kolkata city while majority of them (nearly 67 per cent) lives in Murshidabad district.

West Bengal accounts for the second highest Muslim population in India which is nearly 2.47 crore, who form nearly 27.5 per cent of the state’s population.

In the 2016 Assembly polls, TMC was ahead in nearly 90 minority-dominated Assembly segments. In densely Muslim populated Muslim areas comprise of more than 40 percent of the electorate – TMC was ahead in nearly 60 out of 65 Assembly constituencies.

This shows how a minor swing in the Muslim vote share towards Abbas Siddqui could be a big problem for Banerjee in Nandigram.



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