Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

Mamata loses key Nandigram seat

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com

KOLKATA: Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) leader Suvendhu Adhikari on Sunday sprang a surprise after he retained his Nandigram seat in West Bengal in the assembly elections, albeit a slender margin of just 1,200 votes, against his former boss Trinamool Congress supremo Mamata Banerjee.

However, Banerjee claimed that she the Election of Commission of India (ECI) first declared her winner by over 1,600 votes and then retracted to say that her protege-turned-rival Adhikari won the prestigiou­s seat.

Banerjee alleged that some “mischief” happened in Nandigram, asserting that she will move court against it.

“We have won so big in Bengal but I respect the verdict of the people of Nandigram. Let people of Nandigram decide. Whatever their verdict is, I accept that. It is okay,” she said.

“But, I also feel there was some mischief as after the news of my victory came things changed. Then, heard that the result has changed. I will later move court on this issue,” Banerjee said.

KOLKATA: Barring three, all former Trinamool Congress leaders and legislator­s who were fielded as candidates by the Bharatiya Janata Party, lost in the 2021 assembly elections. In all, the BJP fielded around a dozen former TMC members as candidates.

Experts say that individual anti-incumbency may have well been a factor in their loss -- apart from all the things that worked for the TMC.

One of the three turncoats who managed to win managed an upset: West Bengal chief minister Mamata Banerjee was defeated by her protégé-turnedadve­rsary Suvendu Adhikari in Nandigram in one of the most high-pitched election battles the state has seen in recent times.

Adhikari joined the BJP in December 2020.

BJP National vice president Mukul Roy, who joined the party after quitting TMC in 2017, won from Krishnanag­ar defeating Tollywood actor turned TMC candidate Koushani Mukherjee. At Natabari in north Bengal, former TMC legislator Mihir Goswami, who joined the BJP in November 2020 won.

Psephologi­sts and political commentato­rs said that at least 140 TMC leaders including around 37 legislator­s joined the BJP since 2017. Many who joined even at the last minute at the end of 2020 and early this year were given tickets by the BJP.

But all of them , including former minister Rajib Banerjee, a prominent face of the Singur movement Rabindrana­th Bhat

tacharya or Mukul Roy’s son Subhranshu Roy, lost.

“It is a fact that we didn’t get the desired results. We have to analyse what went wrong,” said Dilip Ghosh, while speaking to media after the trends became clear on Sunday evening.

At Bhabanipur in south Kolkata, the chief minister’s home turf, the BJP fielded a TMC turncoat Rudranil Ghosh against veteran TMC leader and state power minister Sovandeb Chatterjee. Ghosh lost.

Former TMC legislator­s who joined the BJP such as Baishali Dalmiya from Bally, Dipak Kumar Halder from Diamond Harbour, Prabir Ghosal from Uttarpara and Biswajit Kundu

from Kalna , all lost.

This is despite the fact that top BJP leaders including Union home minister Amit Shah campaigned for some of them. Rajib Banerjee, Prabir Ghosal, and Baishali Dalmiya were flown to Delhi by the BJP on a chartered flight where they joined the party in the presence of Shah. The minister also campaigned for Rudranil Ghosh.

“This is the reflection of the people’s protest against the BJP’s attempt to take over Bengal by force using outsiders, corrupt leaders and central agencies. The trend is clear,” said the TMC’s Partha Chatterjee, a state minister.

 ?? ANI ?? TMC supporters wave party flags and celebrate the election victory in central Kolkata on Sunday.
ANI TMC supporters wave party flags and celebrate the election victory in central Kolkata on Sunday.

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