Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Leader of youth, champion orator and Congress’ bulwark in Bengal

- Saubhadra Chatterji letters@hindustant­imes.com

When Priya Ranjan Dasmunsi became a father, he named his son Michhil (march in Bengali). He was then in his 50s. Fatherhood might have come late for Dasmunsi but he tasted political success at an early age.

He was all of 32 when he got elected -- the culture of nomination was yet to take root in the Congress – to the Congress Working Committee (CWC), the party’s highest decision-making body.

The party was grappling with the aftermath of Emergency when Dasmunsi, a firebrand leader, emerged as its face in West Bengal.

Dasmunsi’s oratory, organisati­onal strength and youthful charm were a breath of fresh air in the gloomy, dark Congress quarters. He was popular and soon a member of CWC.

Till he suffered a stroke while celebratin­g Durga Puja ignoring a heart condition, Dasmunsi was one of the two most important Congress leaders in Bengal. Pranab Mukherjee, who went on to be the president of India, was the other.

While Mukherjee was the master strategist, Priyo da — as he was popularly known — was the grassroots man. Together with Subrata Mukherjee, who has since switched sides to the Trinamool Congress and is a senior minister in Mamata Banerjee’s cabinet, Dasmunsi formed a formidable “jodi” that dominated the state’s youth politics for almost 20 years. In the 70s and 80s, they often drew comparison with the successful AmitabhBac­hchanShash­i Kapoor pairing in Bollywood.

But unlike his peers, Dasmunsi’s journey didn’t stop at the Kolkata’s Brigade Parade Ground. His stage was national. A five-term MP, Dasmunsi became the Union minister of state for commerce in 1985 and the party’s chief whip in the Lok Sabha in 1999.

When the Congress came to power in 2004, he joined the Union Cabinet as the minister for water resources. Next year brought a double promotion. He was given charge of informatio­n and broadcasti­ng and parliament­ary affairs.

It was in his small room in the Congress party office in Parliament that I met Dasmunsi for the first time. It was 2002. As I got up to leave, Priyo da smiled and said, “Don’t go to Pranab da (Mukherjee). He won’t give you news.” Mukherjee was then the deputy leader of the opposition in the Rajya Sabha.

Friendly as he was, Dasmunsi was a consummate politician,too.

He would go through parliament­ary records and dig up a remark, stirring trouble for a rival. Mamata Banerjee, his protégée turned bitter rival, experience­d it firsthand when she made headlines for all the wrong reasons. He cultivated press by selectivel­y leaking news on party’s floor strategy in Lok Sabha, but drew a line at Sonia Gandhi and Rahul Gandhi.

His loyalty to the Gandhi family was complete. Long before Digvijaya Singh and Jairam Ramesh demanded Rahul’s elevation, Dasmunsi was one of the first to seek a greater role for the young Gandhi. “I had come through students and youth politics. I know what Rahul is capable of,” he would often say.

He took on rivals head-on but had his fears, too. The biggest perhaps was of surgery. chose to ignore them.

When Dasmunsi breathed his last in the Capital’s Apollo hospital 10 minutes past noon on Monday, Parliament lost a memorable orator. And the Congress, a brilliant student of politics.

NEWDELHI:

 ?? SONU MEHTA/HT ?? Wife Deepa Dasmunsi, son Priyadeep and others pay last respects to Priya Ranjan Dasmunsi at the All India Congress Committee headquarte­rs in New Delhi on Monday.
SONU MEHTA/HT Wife Deepa Dasmunsi, son Priyadeep and others pay last respects to Priya Ranjan Dasmunsi at the All India Congress Committee headquarte­rs in New Delhi on Monday.

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