Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

BJP’S route to Left-stronghold Tripura is via TMC

- Priyanka Deb Barman

The Left Front is the Bharatiya Janata Party’s (BJP) main hurdle in Tripura. But before taking on the entrenched reds, the saffron brigade appears to be gobbling up other competitor­s ahead of the 2018 assembly elections.

In less than 48 hours since Tuesday, some 1,250 Trinamool Congress (TMC) leaders, members, and supporters joined the BJP. It was reminiscen­t of how the TMC poached Congress leaders almost a year ago in a bid to do a West Bengal by uprooting the Marxists.

The Congress in Tripura was on TMC’S radar much before the BJP set out to make the Northeast comprising eight states Congress-free. In June last year, less than a month after the BJP ended 15 years of Congress rule in Assam, the TMC lured away six of the 10 Congress MLAS in Tripura.

It was the culminatio­n of TMC’S 17 years of penetratio­n in the Congress that began with former chief minister Sudhir Ranjan Majumder in 1999. Majumder died 10 years later.

But while the BJP expanded its footprint from Assam to Arunachal Pradesh and Manipur, the TMC’S march has been somewhat halted in Tripura owing to a leadership tussle. TMC lost hundreds of leaders and workers to the BJP this month. The TMC received a major blow when Surajit Dutta and Ratan Chakrabort­y – ministers in Majumder’s Congress government from 1988-1993 – donned saffron. Dutta and Chakrabort­y were among a handful of leaders who helped the TMC grow in Tripura. Dutta went on to be the TMC’S state unit president while Chakrabort­y became the chairman of the party’s coordinati­on committee. “I respect (TMC president and West Bengal chief minister) Mamata Banerjee’s leadership spirit but she has entrusted the Tripura unit of the party with those who do not worked for the people,” Chakrabort­y said after joining BJP with 42 others in the presence Union minister of state for railways Rajen Gohain .

Accusing Tripura’s TMC leaders of working at the behest of CM Manik Sarkar’s Left Front government, Chakrabort­y said the BJP was the only party capable of loosening the Marxist strangle- hold on the state since 1993. Gohain agreed. “Tripura will see a tsunami in 2018 just as people in Uttar Pradesh did,” Gohain said. Tripura is one of three northeaste­rn states where assembly elections are scheduled in 2018. The other two are Meghalaya, where BJP is confident of displacing the Congress-led coalition, and Nagaland, which is ruled by a coalition that the regional Naga People’s Front, a BJP ally, heads.

TMC insiders admitted that a few MLAS and party office-bearers were in touch with BJP leaders and could switch over.

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