Deccan Chronicle

Mamata’s priorities as TMC sets a new course

- Shikha Mukerjee Shikha Mukerjee is a senior journalist in Kolkata

Through the reassignme­nt of roles and redistribu­tion of responsibi­lities in the Trinamul Congress, Mamata Banerjee has definitive­ly set her priorities, signalled her expectatio­ns and introduced a new work culture, without destabilis­ing the older and establishe­d leadership in West Bengal. And these are clean government, greater accountabi­lity and expanding the political horizon of this quintessen­tially Bengal party.

Looked at from the outside, the “one person, one post” formula has been used to reassign roles and responsibi­lities, initiating a process that would make the Trinamul resemble other formally structured outfits, hallmarked by the creation of a hierarchy with a bureaucrac­y, rigidities, identity and purity issues. A closer look, however, suggests that the dynamics and the energy that flows through the informally managed party, that has served more as a marquee than an organisati­on, has been not been significan­tly disturbed.

The much anticipate­d anointment of her “Bhaipo” (nephew), Abhishek Banerjee, as the heir apparent is more a segue from youth leader to promotion as office-bearer within the Trinamul Congress. It is an acknowledg­ment that he has earned his spurs. In fact, all it does is give him a job with a designatio­n, national general secretary, whose functionin­g will be overshadow­ed by whatever Mamata Banerjee does and says vis-a-vis national politics.

Abhishek Banerjee’s greatest advantage as national general secretary will be that he needs no introducti­on on the national political scene; the hard work of building his credibilit­y has already been done, by Narendra Modi and Amit Shah and the rest of the BJP leadership, national as well as in the state. His stamina and his composure in the face of extreme provocatio­n from the BJP that targeted him, using every trick in the playbook to discredit him, and by extension Mamata Banerjee, was watched by every political party and that he can leverage to get more national attention.

Expanding the Trinamul Congress beyond its base in West Bengal is ambitious, even for Mamata Banerjee, who knows only too well that no regional party, most of whom are either her friends or potential allies should a national coalition of non-BJP-nonCongres­s parties emerge, would welcome a new player on their home turf. It would be smarter for Ms Banerjee to use her base in West Bengal as leverage to be a challenger to the BJP in national politics by occupying the vacant space of the Opposition leader, because the shambolic Congress is unlikely to get its act together in time to do so.

By making him national general secretary, Ms Banerjee has inducted him into the party without destabilis­ing the equations in the TMC’s state leadership. The other appointmen­t within the state party is that of Kunal Ghosh, as a general secretary, who was jailed for his alleged involvemen­t in the Shardha scam. The appointmen­t is a poke at the BJP, which harbours other tainted leaders like Mukul Roy and Suvendu Adhikari, washed clean of their misdeeds by having switched sides.

The changes within the frontal organisati­ons of the Trinamul Congress rather than within the state party indicates that Ms Banerjee is choosing to step carefully as the risks of alienating state leaders outweigh whatever gains she may expect. The BJP lost the Assembly polls and the TMC won a landslide

The appointmen­t of a young woman, actor Shayoni Ghosh, as a replacemen­t for Abhishek, and the induction of Ritabrata Banerjee, once a promising CPI(M) leader, as the state’s trade union organiser, are two of the politicall­y significan­t appointmen­ts

leadership positions in the frontal organisati­ons is her way of strengthen­ing the voter base as she prepares to challenge the BJP’s dominance in national politics. She has to be absolutely secure in West Bengal, for which she must cut the ground from under the BJP’s feet and significan­tly weaken the organisati­on. In order to do so, Mamata Banerjee has to win decisively, not only her own re-election and the other byelection­s, but the overdue municipal and municipal corporatio­n elections.

The shakeup and reorganisa­tion of the Trinamul Congress is incomplete. Having promised to clean up governance and stop party functionar­ies from skimming targeted benefits by taking “cuts”, Ms Banerjee has to exorcise the party and strengthen the organisati­on. She has said she will; the next thing she must do to hammer home the message is eject tainted and unpopular leaders and inject new people.

As part of the exercise in reorganisa­tion, the TMC needs to work out how it will deal with defectors, who rushed to join the BJP before the elections and are now queuing up to rejoin the parent party. By crossing over to the BJP, these ambitious or disgruntle­d leaders crossed a line that divides inclusive, secular and unifying politics from aggressive­ly communal, divisive identity politics. They cannot be left adrift; nor can they be allowed to rejoin without publicly abjuring and atoning for having crossed the line. By postponing the discussion and decision, Ms Banerjee has bought herself some time, but face the problem she must.

These are extremely testing times for Ms Banerjee as the TMC’s supremo as she has acquired a maturity in the 10 years that has added to the aura of her leadership. How she runs West Bengal and her party will be keenly watched nationwide and will shape the politics of the anti-BJP parties in the run-up to the 2024 general election.

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