The Asian Age

Left nod to Congress tieup talks

- AGE CORRESPOND­ENT

The CPI( M) on Thursday succeeded in persuading its Left Front partners to reach a consensus on holding alliance discussion­s for the coming Assembly polls with the Congress. To keep them in good humour, the CPI( M) also accepted the Left constituen­ts’ demand that the Congress should take the initiative and send a proposal for talks.

“If the Congress wishes to hold talks with us on alliance, then should we or should we not agree? All 11 Left parties agreed that we should hold discussion­s with the Congress,” Left Front chairman Biman Bose said after a meeting.

Smaller Left Front constituen­ts, like the CPI, RSP and the Forward Bloc, were initially averse to the idea of any unity with the Congress and had publicly voiced their objection. This was when former West Bengal chief minister Buddhadeb Bhattachar­jee and CPI( M) state secretary Surjya Kanta Mishra openly started advocating an alliance with the Congress and asked the party to clarify its stand. However, at the Left Front meeting on Thursday, they were made to toe the CPI( M) line.

Claiming that a “big fight” was ahead, Mr

The Left parties are ready to come to the discussion table if the Congress comes out with the proposal

— BIMAN BOSE Left Front chairman

Bhattachar­jee on Thursday said that the people of the state wanted the Mamata Banerjee government to be removed.

“Today the demand for an alliance has risen because some people have realised that if this government is not ousted from power, there will be total destructio­n in the state,” he said while addressing a rally in Barrackpor­e.

Another CPI( M) leader, Gautam Deb, said that Ms Banerjee was jittery about the prospect of a CPI( M)- Congress alliance.

Meanwhile, Mr Mishra exuded confidence after all the Left parties agreed to discuss the alliance issue with the Congress.

“Eleven Left parties have joined hands on Thursday with us and more will join later. We have to give the people here an alternativ­e to the Trinamul Congress government,” Mr Mishra said.

 ??  ?? Former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and former President Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed’s sons, Dr Pervez Ahmed and Justice Badar Durrez Ahmed, offer prayers at his mazar on his 39th death anniversar­y in New Delhi on Thursday.
Former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and former President Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed’s sons, Dr Pervez Ahmed and Justice Badar Durrez Ahmed, offer prayers at his mazar on his 39th death anniversar­y in New Delhi on Thursday.

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