The Hindu (Kozhikode)

No room for complacenc­y in this high stakes constituen­cy

- S.R. Praveen

Attingal has witnessed it all. Forts have been breached and giants have fallen here that there is no room for complacenc­y even for those who seem to be in complete control.

Back in 1721, the East India Company was sitting rather pretty when the local population launched an uprising, destroyed the company’s troops and took control of the Anchutheng­u fort, in what came to be known as the Attingal Revolt.

In the political arena too, similar unexpected defeats have taken place, like that of former Chief Minister R. Sankar in 1967 to the Communist Party of India (Marxist)‘s K. Anirudhan or that of the CPI(M)‘s Susheela Gopalan to the Congress’ Thalekkunn­il Basheer.

CPI(M) incumbent A. Sampath went into the elections of 2019 with the confidence of three past victories in a constituen­cy which had remained a Left citadel since 1991, only to taste defeat to Congress’ Adoor Prakash by over 40,000 votes.

The Bharatiya Janata Party also made major gains with a campaign centred on the protest against the entry of women to Sabarimala, as Sobha Surendran increased the party’s vote share from 10% to 24% in 2019.

But then, the Congress party’s confidence of having breached the Left’s stronghold was shortlived, as the Left Democratic Front swept all the seven Assembly segments of Attingal in the Assembly elections of 2021.

In the fray now are the incumbent MP, a Union Minister, and a sitting MLA, making it an almost unpredicta­ble and tight contest.

With a resolve to reclaim its bastion, the LDF has fielded sitting MLA and CPI(M) district secretary V.Joy, who wrested the Varkala segment from the Congress in 2021. His familiarit­y in these parts, having served at the panchayat, block panchayat, and district panchayat levels, also titled the scales in favour of his candidatur­e.

With the Congress deciding to field incumbent MPs in most constituen­cies, Mr. Prakash has started his campaign focussing on the need for continuity. Buoyed by the massive improvemen­t in vote share in 2019, the BJP has classified Attingal as one of its ‘Aclass’ constituen­cies in

Kerala and fielded Union Minister of State for External Affairs V. Muraleedha­ran. It has been a plan long in the works as he has been making it a point to spend time in the constituen­cy frequently over the past few years.

Factors at play

The Attingal constituen­cy came into existence in 2008 after the dissolutio­n of the Chirayinke­ezhu constituen­cy and a reshuffle of the Assembly segments. Religious and caste equations will come into play in a constituen­cy which is home to Sivagiri, and where the Sree Narayana Dharma Paripalana Yogam as well as the Nair Service Society has a strong presence. Several pockets have a considerab­le population of minorities, with issues such as the Citizenshi­p (Amendment) Act getting some play in campaign rhetoric.

The Attingal constituen­cy comprises seven Assembly segments, namely Varkala, Attingal, Chirayinke­ezhu, Nedumangad, Vamanapura­m, Aruvikkara, and Kattakada. The total electorate is 13,73,827, including 7,31,870 women, 6,41,938 men, and 19 transgende­r persons.

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