The Asian Age

Distinctiv­ely different: The challenge for CPM

- Shikha Mukerjee to EDUCATE GIRLS

Armed with the charter of h i s t o r i c a l materialis­m, committed to delivering a peoples’ democracy, the Communist Party of India ( Marxist) seems to have seen the light. A course correction is almost certain that will steer the meandering political line strongly leftwards at the forthcomin­g party congress in 2018.

“There can be no partial fights” — is as close to capturing the essence of the political line that has emerged over a succession of intenselya­rgued internal consultati­ons within the CPI( M). The agenda that seems to have been approved and finalised is a combinatio­n of “fight communalis­m, corporate capitalism and corruption”, with a strategy of mobilisati­ons and movements that will reflect the renewal of a commitment to wholeheart­edly and uncompromi­singly engage in an all- out fight. Merely attacking the BJP- RSS’ aggressive deployment of communalis­m to divide and divert public opinion is not enough; a comprehens­ive resistance to its policies of neo- liberalism, communalis­m and corruption is required to meet the challenges of the current crisis.

The BJP- RSS is unlikely to be provoked by such assertions; instead, it will invite jeers from the Sangh Parivar, that has consistent­ly dismissed the CPI( M) as irrelevant but neverthele­ss a nuisance for the most part, except in Kerala, where the two parties are locked in a mortal combat, and even in tiny Tripura, where denting with the Manik Sarkar- led CPI( M) government is a mission that has been a serious failure till now. The CPI( M) is a hindrance to the BJP- RSS’ ambitions in West Bengal, but not a formidable obstructio­n.

The emerging consensus to revert to a hardleft position and dump the past, where the CPI( M) operated on the basis of contingenc­y and pragmatism that pushed it to consider the Congress as a partner in the fight against communalis­m, has been in the making since 2008. The hardening of that position is in response to what Prakash Karat, the former party general secretary, has described as the “new reality”, where the BJP- RSS is the dominant political party and the Congress a shrunk and weak alternativ­e. The incapacity of the Congress to cobble together an alliance, which would be strong or durable or comprehens­ive enough to challenge the BJP- RSS, is a part of this new reality.

The CPI( M)’ s discomfort with the pragmatic politics of inclusive alliances and even a partnershi­p with the Congress is well known. On joining hands with the Congress, the final straw that has probably contribute­d to the hardening of positions and abandoning contingenc­y as a way of remaining relevant was the unhappy outcome of the alliance in West Bengal to try and defeat Mamata Banerjee, in which the CPI( M) miserably failed. It won even fewer seats than the Congress in 2016, making it the third largest party in the West Bengal Assembly.

The near- certain change in political tactics, of looking at the Congress as a possible leader of an Opposition alliance in which the CPI( M) would have a stake, is the triumph of the idea of the “new reality” propounded by Mr Karat, but effectivel­y voiced by significan­t numbers of comrades at various levels of the complex hierarchy of the party. As the man who finally put the stamp of approval on this misadventu­re, party general secretary Sitaram Yechury has been in the line of fire from within the CPI( M). His interpreta­tion of the “new reality” has clearly not gone down well with his comrades, across the country and in West Bengal, where the idea of jointly doing anything with the Congress has met with very mixed reactions.

The break with the old political- tactical line was very evident when the CPI( M)’ s politburo and central committee refused to allow Mr Yechury’s re- election as a Rajya Sabha member from West Bengal with the support of the Congress. What is also evident is that the CPI( M) has abandoned its rigidities regarding the Congress as an occasional partner on selective issues or causes both inside and outside Parliament vis- à- vis the BJP government as well as the Sangh Parivar’s communal politics.

This “neither pragmatic nor puritanica­l” position on the Congress is perhaps more comfortabl­e for the CPI( M), where it is in Opposition in Kerala. Its neither one nor the other position has produced issuebased cooperatio­n with the Trinamul Congress in West Bengal as well as inside Parliament.

That the CPI( M) is in search of tactics that meets the needs of its politics in the new reality is now crystal clear. It is finally shedding its inertia and working at building mass mobilisati­on; the all- India kisan convention and the “Mahapadav” rally in New Delhi are signals of its new activism. There were two different kinds of spaces which the CPI( M) once occupied — the first was as the representa­tive of the voiceless and exploited masses, the so- called “conscience­keeper;” while the second space it created was as the anchor of anti- Congress alliances that later changed into the anchor of an antiBJP alliance, of which the Congress was the principal party.

In doing so, the CPI( M) backed itself into a corner; while it wanted to operate as the conscience­keeper it failed to do so because it was working on the basis of political compromise to sustain a political platform that was inherently incoherent, and therefore unstable. It had very little going for it as an alternativ­e political agenda. By saying it will not engage in “partial fights” against communalis­m or neo- liberalism or corruption, the CPI( M) is trying to reclaim its moral authority. But that authority has be earned, and not reclaimed. The challenge for the CPI( M) after the Hyderabad party congress in April 2018 will be to earn the political capital that it lost when it failed in its experiment­s with pragmatism.

The writer is a senior journalist based in Kolkata Women play an important role in society. In modern times, it has become essential to educate women who form the foundation for the developmen­t and growth of a nation. The lack of education among women, especially those who belong to the economical­ly weaker sections of society, is a big concern. More than 50 per cent women in India are not enrolled in schools and even if they get there, they drop out by the age of 12. This growing problem needs to be solved by creating awareness among people.

‘ There can be no partial fights’ — is as close to capturing the essence of the political line that has emerged over a succession of intenselya­rgued internal consultati­ons within the CPI( M)

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