People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXIV
No.
43 October 24, 2010 |
CPI(M) Seeks to Win
Vibhutipur
for the Fifth Consecutive
Time
HOW much the
consistent
land struggles waged by the CPI(M) in Samastipur district have rooted
the Party
in the masses can be seen from its candidate's electoral record in
Vibhutipur
constituency. Ramdev Verma, CPI(M) state committee member and sitting
MLA from
this constituency, has been winning from here without a break since
1990.
Despite the fact that the CPI(M) stronghold, Ujiarpur, has been
bifurcated from
this constituency and made into a separate constituency under
delimitation
exercise, the CPI(M) leader is confident of maintaining his winning
record. He
polled around 48,000 votes in 2005 assembly election, winning with a
comfortable margin of 14,000 votes over the Janata Dal (United)
nominee. He
asserts that this time the margin is going to be bigger in the
four-cornered
contest involving JD(U), LJP and Congress. Polling takes place in the
second
phase on October 24.
Verma's
confidence stems
from the amount of work done by the Party and the militant struggles it
waged
here for the benefit of the downtrodden people. This area, along with
the
adjoining Darbhanga district, witnessed militant land struggles in
which 22
comrades became martyrs since 1993. Another two were killed by
criminals while
fighting against corruption in government schemes. Thousands of
agricultural
workers could get houses to live and land to till by occupying the
surplus
lands of zamindars under the leadership of CPI(M). Verma himself led
many such
struggles and is on the hit list of the landlords. He is provided with
a high
level security by the government, with three gunmen and an escort jeep.
Another
12 comrades who are leading the land struggles have a threat to their
life.
The CPI(M)
candidate is
pitted against the Janata Dal (United) candidate Ram Balak Singh, who
has total
backing of landlords and criminals in the district. Also in the fray is
Lok
Janshakti Party nominee, Ramesh Prasad Rai, who has criminal background
and is
a relative of renowned criminal, Suraj Bhan. Consequently, Verma is
hammering
home the point of having peace and development in the constituency by
defeating
those with criminal background. Verma's stature as an honest, senior
MLA and
his impressive performance in the assembly make him stand apart from
the
contending nominees.
How caste
divisions
fostered by bourgeois-landlord parties can be overcome and the unity of
the
working people preserved can be seen here. As the bitter land struggle
went on,
the poor agricultural workers belonging to the backward and scheduled
castes
along with those from the upper castes clearly saw in whose interest
the
struggles were being waged. With the attacks by the landlords growing
and the
class struggle sharpening, it became much more clear. The upper caste
landlords
sought to keep the poor from their castes away from the CPI(M) by
branding it
as a pichdon ka party (a party of the backwards). This didn't
cut ice
with them. Today, the CPI(M) candidate gets votes of both the upper
caste poor
as also of the most backward of the dalits, the Musahrs. There is an
overcoming
of the caste barrier to the extent possible in the present situation.
With growing
burdens on
the people in the form of price rise, corruption in government schemes
etc,
there is a threat for an incumbent MLA to be affected by the
discontentment of
the people. Asked about this, the CPI(M) leader says that the Party
carries out
an intensive political campaign among the people explaining about the
government's policies that are resulting in such a situation. And,
apart from
the land struggle, the Party has waged many struggles on availability
of
fertiliser and other agricultural inputs, against the corruption in
welfare
schemes and on other people's issues. So, this also helps in
demarcating the
Party, he says.
Asked about
the use of
money power by his opponents, Verma tells us that a lot of money has
been made
by contractors-criminals-politicians in the course of last few years in
the
name of development works. There is a real threat of that being used in
these
elections. However, the Party is prepared to counter it and has plans
to have
vigilance teams at all entry points in the area from the night of
October 21 to sieze such money.
As our chat
with Verma was
continuing, in walked a poor peasant and loudly greeted him “Namashkar
Vidhayak
ji”. Even as Verma was acknowledging the greeting, others tried to keep
the
peasant away saying the MLA is talking to press persons. But the
peasant did
not relent and asserted his right to an audience with his MLA. And, it
was
wilfully granted. That, in a frame, showed to us the kind of connect
that the
CPI(M) MLA has with the poor in his constituency. No wonder he is
confident of
a fifth consecutive victory.
N S Arjun from
Vibhutipur