The Hindu - International

Tea, identity politics dominate rst phase of polling in Bengal

The BJP had won Cooch Behar, Alipurduar, and Jalpaiguri in 2019, but faces a sti† challenge from Trinamool; Congress and the Left are also in the fray in the region; minimum wages for tea garden workers, land ownership in estates are key issues

- Shiv Sahay Singh

he economic woes of the tea gardens and their workers, and the identity politics of the Rajbangshi community are likely to be key issues determinin­g the choices of voters in three constituen­cies along the northern fringes of West Bengal which will go to the polls in the “rst phase on April 19.

The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) had won all three seats — Cooch Behar, Alipurduar and Jalpaiguri — in the 2019 Lok Sabha election, but the Trinamool Congress has gained considerab­le ground since then and is now posing a stiž challenge in the region. Campaignin­g for the “rst phase ends on Wednesday.

TRajbangsh­i community

In Cooch Behar, the BJP has “elded Nisith Pramanik, whose rise from a deputy pradhan in the town of Dinhata to Union Minister of State for Home Affairs in the national capital has marked one of the steepest ascents in West Bengal politics.

While the BJP MP is banking on his charisma, the Trinamool Congress is highlighti­ng the criminal cases against him and his long absence constituen­cy.

Given that 40% of Cooch Behar’s voters are from the Rajbangshi community, their identity issues are also crucial to the constituen­cy. Previously, tensions in the area boiled over their demands for a separate State of Greater Cooch Behar. In August 2023, the BJP nominated Nagendra Roy alias Ananta Maharaj to the Rajya Sabha to win the support of the community. Now, for the Lok Sabha election, the Trinamool is keeping its hopes alive as another Rajbangshi leader Bangshi Badan Barman has put his weight behind their candidate, Jagadish Chandra Basunia.

The district is also home to thousands of people who lived in a series of erstwhile enclaves along the India-Bangladesh border, from his and who became Indian citizens only after the historic exchange of enclaves between the two countries in 2015. They hope their pending issues will be resolved after the Lok Sabha election.

Distress in the estates

In Alipurduar and Jalpaiguri, political discourse is dominated by the distress prevailing in the tea estates that produce 60% of the State’s tea. Of the 150 large tea gardens in the region, 18 have shut down. The implementa­tion of minimum wages for tea garden workers, and issues relating to ownership of the land in the tea estates are critical.

In both Alipurduar and Coochbedha­r, the contest is between an MP and an MLA representi­ng the region. Despite the fact that John Barla won the Alipurduar Lok Sabha seat in 2019 by a margin of over 2.5 lakh votes, the BJP has dropped the sitting MP and instead “elded the Madarihat MLA Manoj Tigga, who is also its chief whip in the West Bengal Assembly. The Trinamool Congress has “elded its Rajya Sabha MP Prakash Chandra Barik for the seat, which is reserved for the Scheduled Tribe (ST) community, setting up a battle between two popular leaders.

In the adjoining Jalpaiguri district, it is the BJP’s sitting MP Jayanta Roy who is pitted against the Trinamool’s Dhupguri MLA Nirmal Chandra Roy. A political storm has erupted after a tornado in Jalpaiguri claimed “ve lives on April 2, with the ruling party claiming that it cannot rebuild the ažected houses because of the Model Code of Conduct.

At his rallies in Cooch

Behar, Prime Minister Narendra Modi has targeted the Trinamool Congress on various fronts, from corruption allegation­s to the violence at Sandeshkha­li in south Bengal, and the attacks against central agency o¤cials allegedly by the latter’s supporters.

Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee, who has campaigned extensivel­y in the region, has accused the Centre and the local BJP MPs of not doing anything for the region, including the tea gardens.

Other candidates

The Left parties and the Congress have “elded candidates in these seats, as they do not have any seatsharin­g agreement with the Trinamool in West Bengal despite them all being members of the Opposition Indian National Developmen­tal, Inclusive Alliance (INDIA) bloc. In Cooch Behar, the Congress has “elded Piya Roy Chowdhury, while Nitish Chandra Roy is contesting as a candidate of the All India Forward Bloc, a constituen­t of the Left Front. Milli Oraon of the Revolution­ary Socialist Party, another constituen­t of the Left Front, is contesting from Alipurduar, while the Communist Party of India (M)’s Debraj Barman is the joint candidate of the Left and the Congress in Jalpaiguri.

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