People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXV No. 16 April 22, 2001 |
Rebel Candidates Outnumber Official Ones IN a meeting attended by more than 250 Pradesh Congress state-level and district-level leadership, the newly-formed "Congress Bachao Committee" chose to declare a list of 100 candidates who would contest against Trinamul Congress nominees in different districts. The "understanding" between the Pradesh Congress and the Trinamul Congress had resulted in the former being "allotted" 57 seats by the latter. Describing the "understanding" as a "clannish, familial, majoritarian stance of anti-people character," "Bachao Committee" leaders whose ranks included very many sitting MLAs, declared their intentions to teach the "traitors a good lesson, come the elections." In the meanwhile, a series of "open door" and "closed door" meetings have failed to resolve the issue of the candidatures in the 57 seats allotted to the Pradesh Congress. Several rounds of meetings were held throughout the days-and-nights of April 10, 11, and 12 between the Somen Mitra faction and the "official", i.e., pro-Trinamul Congress splinter groups in the presence of "central observer," Kolkata-based trader-cum-CWC member, Kamal Nath, where invectives were audibly hurled at one another as the sessions started to hot up. Elsewhere, furious exchanges took place, and bodily harm was always on the cards, as the quarrelling leadership self-proclaimed" senior partner" of the "mini-mahajot", the pro-Mamata Trinamul Congress faujdars slugged it out over "who would get which seat" with little faith placed in the inviolability of the list already doing the rounds, despite the fact that the list does keep options democratically open by mentioning several names against one seat. The Bachao Committee, has already declared a "war" on the come-lately "stalwarts" who had hogged the majority of the elusive and illusory "tickets" for what are considered "plum" choices of constituencies for the coming assembly polls. The Trinamul Congress chief, Mamata Banerjee has, in the meanwhile, wisely gone "missing" over the increased tempo of bickering within even the faithfuls of her flock and would not, despite pleas from a coterie of her sycophants in the media (one of whom had reportedly drafted the Trinamul Congress "election manifesto"), make an appearance when the document was released after a long, long wait. In a huff, the state BJP has of late been breathing fire at Mamata and her lackeys for the "great betrayal", they should have known better. It is in the political agenda of Mamata Banerjee to shift her priorities around as the occasion suits her personal agenda of clawing up the ladder of self-importance. In any case, the state BJP has been mulling over possible candidates to all 294 constituencies of the state, and the fact that several aspiring Trinamul Congress minions have queued up before the Kolkata office of the BJP is being bragged about ad nauseam by at least one of the two BJP ministers from Bengal, the one with whom Mamata has had a longish running feud over who is closer to the "able prime minister." Moving on, the chief electoral officer has denied that there had been "any attack organised on Saifuddin Chaudhury by the CPI(M) at Nadanghat in Burdwan" as alleged, loudly and in a mounting frenzy, in the corporate media by Chaudhury and his decreasing coterie of hangers-on. Not one to let go of one of the rare issues that he and his sorry outfit could latch onto, even if with feeble repercussions among the people who appear distinctly unmoved at his antics, Chaudhury has gone on raising the issue of "possibilities of personal injuries being caused to me" before a series of bored and dishearteningly small audiences across the metropolis.