The Hindu - International

Rift in INDIA bloc comes to fore in Bengal ahead of third phase

Mamata has been saying there is no INDIA tie-up in West Bengal and that the Left and Congress have been working for BJP; four constituen­cies in one of the most economical­ly backward regions of the State are going to the polls on May 7

- Shiv Sahay Singh

The schism in the Indian National Developmen­tal, Inclusive Alliance (INDIA) in West Bengal has become more pronounced ahead of the third phase of the Lok Sabha election in which four constituen­cies in the central region of the State go to the polls.

Chief Minister and Trinamool Congress chairperso­n Mamata Banerjee, who had participat­ed in a few meetings of the INDIA bloc and had claimed to have given the name to the alliance, šnally decided to šeld candidates from all the 42 Lok Sabha constituen­cies in the State.

She blamed the Congress for not being able to reach an electoral understand­ing.

During her campaign, Ms. Banerjee has been saying there is no INDIA bloc in West Bengal and the Left parties and the Congress have been working for the BJP.

The Congress, led by Adhir Ranjan Chowdhury, and the Communist Party of India (M), led by Mohammad Salim, are not sparing an opportunit­y to target the Chief Minister and her government either.

At a rally in Murshidaba­d’s Domkal, Mr. Salim, while sharing the stage with Mr. Chowdhury, vowed to drag the Chief Minister out of the State Secretaria­t in the 2026 Assembly election.

Minority voters

The region has a distinct geography and demography, and the issues are constituen­cy-specišc. Both Malda and Murshidaba­d districts have a signišcant minority population and the Trinamool, the Left and the Congress leadership want to win the support of the Muslim community.

The BJP is hoping that a split in the Muslim vote and a polarisati­on of voters will help the party.

Out of the four constituen­cies, the BJP had won Malda Uttar, the Congress had wrested Malda Dakshin and the Trinamool had won Jangipur and Murshidaba­d in the 2019 Lok Sabha election. This time, the BJP has launched a highpitche­d campaign not only in Malda but also in Murshidaba­d district. Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Home Minister Amit Shah have campaigned in Malda, while BJP president J.P. Nadda has held rallies in Murshidaba­d.

Ms. Banerjee and Trinamool general secretary Abhishek Banerjee are campaignin­g extensivel­y in the region.

These constituen­cies have thrown up interestin­g battles. The CPI(M)’s Mr. Salim is contesting from Murshidaba­d against sitting MP Abu Taher Khan of the Trinamool. In Jangipur, sitting MP and bidi baron Khalilur Rahaman, is pitted against Congress candidate Mohammad Murtaza Hossain, grandson of Congress leader Abu Hena.

In Malda Dakshin, Congress candidate Isha Khan Chowdhury is defending his family bastion. His father, Abu Hasem Khan Chowdhury, had represente­d the constituen­cy since 2006, and prior to this, his uncle, the late A.B.A. Ghani Khan Chowdhury, was the MP.

The Congress candidate is facing the Trinamool’s Shahnawaj Ali Raihan, a scholar from Oxford, and the BJP has šelded English Bazaar MLA Sreerupa Mitra Chowdhury.

Malda Uttar will see a šght between sitting BJP MP Khagen Murmu and former IPS o¢cer and Trinamool candidate Prasun Banerjee.

The region is one of the economical­ly most backward regions of the State, with millions of youth migrating in search of work. While men move to the States in the south and in the north for higher wages, women roll bidis to add to their income.

The districts have also borne the brunt of river erosion that has left thousands of people homeless and the State losing about 200 square kilometres of land in the past several decades. Like the previous elections, politician­s both in power at the Centre and in the State are giving assurances to the migrants and to the people aŒected by river erosion that they will take concrete steps after the election.

CAA-NRC issue

Another key issue that has dominated the election campaign is the Citizenshi­p (Amendment) Act. The Trinamool leadership, including the Chief Minister, has been highlighti­ng that the CAA and the Rules notišed in March are a precursor to the National Register of Citizens and aimed at sending “Muslims to camps”.

While the region was considered a Congress bastion, the Trinamool swept the Assembly election in 2021 on the issue of the CAA-NRC.

The Left-Congress leadership claims that the “CAA is an attempt to create a political binary of BJP-Trinamool” and will not have an impact on the electorate of the region in the Lok Sabha election.

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