India Today

FROM DIDI TO DURGA

Mamata Banerjee’s victory holds out hope not just for Bengal but for opposition forces across the country looking to halt the relentless march of the saffron brigade

- By Romita Datta

ITwas dusk on May 2 by the time news came that Mamata Banerjee had created history yet again. With a hat-trick of victories, and having secured more than 200 seats for the second time, her party, the All-India Trinamool Congress (TMC), had surpassed all expectatio­ns. The enduring image of this election will be of the wheelchair-bound Mamata, a wounded tigress who fought alone against the entire might of the BJP, including the prime minister. Anti-incumbency, allegation­s of corruption and minority appeasemen­t, sexist taunts…Mamata braved them all, and in the end her party was the only one left standing, winning 213 of the 292 seats (elections to two seats have been deferred). By bringing the relentless BJP juggernaut to a halt, her status in Bengal has been upgraded from Didi to that of a Durga. Mamata has exposed the claims of the Modi-Shah duo’s reputed invincibil­ity as a mere boast and emerged as the great big hope of opposition forces across the country.

Congratula­tions poured in almost immediatel­y, and not just from Opposition leaders. Congress president Sonia Gandhi called her up, NCP supremo Sharad Pawar hailed the TMC’s win as a “stupendous victory”, while the Shiv Sena lauded the “Tigress of Bengal”. Prime Minister Narendra Modi was gracious, tweeting his congratula­tions while defence minister Rajnath Singh sent her “wishes for her next tenure”. It’s a different matter that the camaraderi­e dissolved soon after, as post-poll violence between TMC and BJP workers resulted in a number of deaths, leading the BJP to boycott Mamata’s swearing-in. West

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