Khaleej Times

Will West Bengal’s Baharampur bless Congress this time again?

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kolkata — The Baharampur Lok Sabha constituen­cy in West Bengal is set to witness a triangular battle between Congress’ Adhir Ranjan Chowdhury, Trinamool’s Apurba Sarkar and BJP’s Krishna Juardar Arya in the 2019 Lok Sabha polls.

Going against the Left Front’s decision not to put up a candidate for the seat despite the collapse of its seat adjustment talks with Congress, LF partner Revolution­ary Socialist Party (RSP) has nominated Eid Mohammed. But LF chairman Biman Bose has made it clear that it violated the combine’s stand, and asked RSP to withdraw from the race.

The Baharampur parliament­ary constituen­cy has been a happy hunting ground for the Congress since 1999, electing the party’s formidable leader Chowdhury in four back-to-back battles.

With the RSP nominee not getting the backing of the LF, Murshidaba­d strongman Chowdhury seems confident of a fifth straight term, despite a determined charge by the Trinamool Congress.

Baharampur, the administra­tive headquarte­rs of Bengal’s one-time capital Murshidaba­d district, is also the seventh largest city in the state.

The constituen­cy comprises seven assembly segments — Burwan, Kandi, Bharatpur, Rejinagar, Beldanga, Baharampur and Naoda and has over 16 lakh voters, nearly half of them belonging to the minority community.

Chowdhury, the sitting MP and the former state Congress chief, defeated Trinamool Congress’ singer-turned-politician Indranil Sen by over 3.5 lakh votes in the 2014 General Elections.

RSP’s Pramothes Mukherjee, who had been Chowdhury’s closest rival on three occasions prior to 2014, came a close third while Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) candidate Debesh Kumar Adhikary emerged a distant fourth.

In 2019, the seat is set to witness a triangular battle with Trinamool fielding Chowdhury’s once trusted soldier, Apurba Sarkar, and BJP giving the ticket to Krishna Juardar Arya.

The Left Front has so far chosen to stay away despite the collapse

of its seat adjustment talks with Congress last month. Baharampur was once a stronghold of RSP, whose legendary leader Tridib Chaudhuri won seven consecutiv­e terms from 1952 to 1984. Though Congress managed to sneak away a victory in the 1984 polls, the Left party swiftly took it back after five years and held on to the seat for four more terms till 1999.

The RSP claims it opted to field Eid Mohammed following a “strong demand” among its activists at the grassroots level to field a candidate of their own.

“It will be very painful if there isn’t a Left candidate in Baharampur. It was decided by the Front not to field a candidate there as we were looking to have a seat adjustment with Congress. But at the party’s district level, there was a strong demand that we nominate a candidate as it is a traditiona­l RSP base,” senior RSP leader Manoj Bhattachar­ya said.

But Bose was not impressed. “It was the LF’s unanimous decision not to put up a candidate. If despite that RSP has decided to fight in Baharampur, it is a violation of the LF’s decision. They have to withdraw”.

Chowdhury, affectiona­tely called “Robinhood of Murshidaba­d” by his supporters for standing by the needy, seemed unperturbe­d by the developmen­ts.

“We have always fought against the Left here. Last time we fought against both the Left and TMC and still won with a big margin. So whether they field a candidate or not, we will not have any problem (in winning),” Chowdhury said.

“It would have been good had the (LF-Congress) seat adjustment materialis­ed across Bengal. In Baharampur people will vote for Congress for the consistent developmen­t that we have done,” he asserted.

In 2016, the Congress won all the seven assembly segments which constitute Baharampur.

However, a lot has changed in the district and the constituen­cy over the past three years. An aggressive Trinamool Congress has captured the zilla parishad (top tier of the three-rung panchayat system in Bengal) and all municipali­ties, either through election or through defection.

Scores of Congress leaders and workers, including three MLAs — Abu Taher Khan (Nawda), Rabiul Alam Chowdhury (Rejinagar) and Sarkar (Kandi) — crossed over to the Trinamool, whose supremo Mamata Banerjee has made it a prestige issue to defeat her bete noire Adhir Chowdhury.

Trinamool candidate Sarkar said he is happy to fight an ideologica­l battle against his one-time mentor Chowdhury, as he is “maintainin­g political double standards” by secretly joining hands with both BJP and Left Front. —

 ??  ?? 2ND TIME LUCKY? Baharampur is locked in triangular battle, with Adhir contesting from Congress
2ND TIME LUCKY? Baharampur is locked in triangular battle, with Adhir contesting from Congress

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