People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXVII
No. 11 March 17, 2013 |
Tripura: Great Victory was Certainly
no
Cakewalk Haripada Das NOW
that the people of Tripura have once again reposed
their faith in the Left
Front, with a five-sixth majority in the just
concluded assembly elections, a
new council of ministers under the leadership of
Manik Sarkar was sworn in on
March 6 amid the cheers of thousands of enthusiastic
people. The seventh Left
Front government of the state has thus started its
renewed venture. If
only we takes the trouble to scan the election
results, one would find that
though Tripura is a tiny state in the backward north
eastern region of the
country, it has set bright records in our electoral
history. First, the voter
turnout in this election was 93.73 per cent, which
was unprecedented for STRAIGHT CONTEST BUT NO STRAIGHT VICTORY These
assembly polls saw a straight contest between Left
Front on the one hand and the
Congress-INPT-NCT alliance on the other. While the
Left Front won 50 seats in the
60-member assembly, the Congress bagged the
remaining 10 and its allies none. Most
of the 129 other candidates sponsored by various
national and state parties ---
the BJP, NCP, SP, IPFT (a breakaway group of
erstwhile TUJS), SUCI, CPI(ML),
Amara Bengali etc --- could hardly make their
presence felt in any
constituency. The BJP contested 50 seats but lost
deposits in all except
Dharmanagar ( Next,
this is the first time since 1978 that the INPT
(erstwhile TUJS), a mask of the
terrorist NLFT outfit and an electoral ally of the
Congress, has no presence in
the assembly. All
the five women candidates put up by the CPI(M)
returned this time. Out of the 20
ST and 10 SC reserved seats, the Left Front won 19
and 8 respectively, and the
Congress the rest. Out
of its 50 seats, the Left Front won 45 with more
than 50 per cent of votes.
Those include five seats with more than 60 per cent
and 11 with more than 55
per cent votes. The Left Front lost in three seats,
even though it polled more
than 48 per cent here. On the other hand, of its 10
seats, the Congress won five
with more than 50 per cent votes. Overall, the Left
Front polled 52.32 per cent
votes, 1.14 per cent higher than in the 2008
assembly elections. The Congress
alliance, however, retained the vote percentage it
polled last time. Thus the
people of Tripura sincerely responded to the Left
Front’s call for a new term
with a bigger mandate. The people’s verdict is
decisive in respect of seats as
well as votes. But
was it a straight road to victory in a straight
contest? By no means! While
reviewing these results, we must consider the
national situation when the Left is
passing through a defensive phase. After the debacle
the Left faced in With
this aim in view, the Congress appointed paid
whole-time workers in every
constituency from mid-2011 onward --- unlike what it
did in any other earlier
election. Even though a majority of the print media
here are basically
anti-Left and serve the Congress cause day in and
day out, several new publications
with an anti-Left attitude were launched. Several
cable channels too were set
up to run an anti-Left campaign. Most of these print
and electronic media
reportedly had the backing of the Congress party or
some corporate house. In
contrast, there was only Daily Desher
Katha to refute the volley of scandals and
forged allegations dished out by
the anti-Left media. CONGRESS USES EXTREMIST OUTFIT In
addition, the Congress began to revive the already
waning NLFT extremist outfit
through leaders of the INPT; the latter is an open
front of the NLFT outlaws and
electoral ally of the Congress. In all earlier
elections, the NLFT always perpetrated
violence in favour of the Congress-INPT alliance. In
league with some
surrendered extremist youth and Congress tribal
leaders, INPT leaders had been collecting
huge funds for this extremist outfit camping in Taking
a cue from Trinamul Congress (TMC) in HEINOUS DESIGN The
Congress also created a lot of confusion about the
revision of electoral rolls
this time; at one point people were in suspense
whether the elections would be
held in time. The Congress started to play a dubious
role right from the roll revision
in the later part of 2012. After the period fixed
for submitting claims and
objections ended, they collected complaints
regarding “erroneous” entries and
submitted them to the Election Commission (EC) in Moreover,
while the EC was probing the complaints submitted
directly to them in violation
of the official procedure of correction, the
Congress started propaganda that it
would not allow election to be held unless an
error-free roll was made. On the
other hand, while verifying the complaints, the roll
observers were highly
astonished to find that the so called ‘ghost voters’
physically stood before
them to stake claim as genuine voters.
Understandably, most of them were Left
Front supporters. At last, when the final roll was
published, it was seen that the
rate of increase of the electorate was 3.3 per cent,
quite normal and close to the
national average. Evidently, the Congress engaged in
this tug of war only to
drag the election schedule beyond the tenure of the
Left Front government so
that elections could be held under president’s rule.
This heinous design of the
Congress, however, did not succeed. But
the foulest game the Congress party played in this
election was the
distribution of bribe in cash and kind. Jahar Saha,
one of the AICC members
from Tripura, recently informed at a press
conference that the Congress High
Command had allotted 50 lakh rupees for each
constituency. They lavishly doled
out this fund to the electors, though in a
clandestine manner. To avoid the
alert surveillance of the people, the Congress
adopted a new trick to bribe the
electors. Instead of directly handing over any cash
or articles to the
electors, they passed on tokens to the electors who
may receive from the
suppliers the desired articles on production of
these tokens. BUNDLES OF LIES AND SLANDERS The
Left Front government has been in office for the
last 35 years, with a
five-year break in 1988-93, and has certainly
succeeded in fulfilling many aspirations
of the people. The government also put forward an
alternative approach for the
well-being of the common people. But, as one knows,
once the income of the
people rises, their aspirations also grow. Thus at
one point of time it was
difficult to keep pace with the people’s
aspirations, more so for a resource-crunched
state like Tripura. Thus it is natural if after so
many years, some sections of
the people got aggrieved. However, even if an
anti-incumbency factor was there,
it was insignificant and did not much affect the
prospect of the Left Front. The
latter faced this aspect with a polite admission of
its failure in certain
areas. Several
central ministers, Rahul Gandhi and other Congress
leaders from Delhi, leaders
from West Bengal, Assam, Meghalaya, Nagaland and
Arunachal Pradesh etc, made frequent
visits to Tripura during the six month before the
polls, and spread while lies
against the Left Front government and the CPI(M) in
particular. The anti-Left
media in the state gladly dished out these slanders
to mislead the people. While
Left Front leaders, in their campaign, highlighted
the issues of neo-liberal
policies, their chilling impact, the state
government’s alternative approach,
its performance, it achievements and its failures,
the Congress leaders
including Rahul Gandhi mainly relied on
anti-communist slanders and baseless
allegations of misappropriation from government
exchequer etc. But the people
of Tripura did not accept this negative campaign of
the Congress and allies. Thus
it was the victory of a pro-people alternative
against the neo-liberal
policies, a victory of the sentiments of peace and
stability against violence
and instability, victory of morality against money
power, victory of honesty over
treachery and falsehood. Now it is the turn of the
Left Front and its government
to show that they would honour the trust the people
have bestowed upon
them.