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Mamata Losing In Bengal: Otherwise Why Stuff Ballot Boxes
Saeed Naqvi
A senior BJP leader, campaigning in
Kolkata, may well have put his finger on the people’s pulse. When he attacked
Mamata Banerjee and the Left-Cong Front in equal measure, the crowd response
was tepid. But when he attacked the TMC for 60 per cent of his speech, people
applauded. At 75 percent, there was thunderous applause.
This was at the earlier phases of
polling but there is no reason to believe that the trend will change before
counting day. In fact, if the violence witnessed during the earlier phases
continues, and the stuffing of ballot boxes by ‘ghost’ voters after polling
hours multiplies, it will become clear that the TMC is nervous. It is brazening
it out through violence, which has now become associated with Mamata’s party in
the popular imagination.
Does this mean there was no violence during
34 years of CPM rule? A left liberal intellectual explains it succinctly: “CPM
was more disciplined because it was cadre based – cadres knew the area and its
leaders, the ones who had to be attacked. TMC goons who have grown during the
five years of TMC rule, enter areas they may not know and attack everybody.
There is, therefore, much more bloodshed.” There is universal fear.
“Laat khayega ki biryani khayega?”
(Would you like to be kicked or served biryani?) An “Aabdar” or barman at one
of Kolkata’s many clubs, mimics the TMC’s neighbourhood tough. Aabdar is
derived from Urdu – one who serves drinks.
“This time we are quiet but we shall
show our hands at the polling booth.” He is clearly among the urban Muslims
still loyal to the CPM. Otherwise Muslims across the board have no grievance
with Mamata.
In fact they quite adore her for the way
she created an almighty movement in West Bengal on the land issue in Singur and
Nandigram between 2006 and 2007. In both these efforts at industrialization by
the CPM, poorest Muslims, among others, would have lost their livelihood and
property, “had Didi not intervened.”
That is where she hit the political
jackpot. She had lost the 2006 assembly poll but she used Singur and Nandigram
as fulcrums to turn her fortunes around. She won 70 per cent of the 54,000
Panchayat seats in 2008. In 2009 Lok Sabha election, Left Front came down to 15
seats from 42 in 2004. In 2014, they had only two seats. Mamata won 38.
Now comes the “vote share” punditry on
which those who wish to see the back of Mamata in Bengal base their
calculations.
Even at her peak Mamata’s vote share was
only 40 per cent. The CPM was 30 per cent and Congress, 10. The BJP may have won
just two seats but its vote share was 17 percent. A very arithmetical argument
is: CPM’s 30 percent and Congress 10 makes the alliance equal to Mamata’s 40.
The question is: which way will the BJP’s 17 per cent split?
In a complex sociological turf,
arithmetic is inadequate to accurately calculate electoral outcomes. To this
comes a quick riposte. In Bihar Lalu Prasad Yadav held onto his vote bank.
After the Nitish Kumar – BJP combination ran its course, it was the Nitish-Lalu
combination that triumphed.
Through grit, courage and a refusal to
lose, once Mamata ascended the gaddi, she faced her biggest challenge: how to
cope with the CPM cadres? Violent tactics to overcome this handicap has become
a strategy. Willy nilly she must keep riding the tiger. A group of thugs, cheering
her along. Some of these cheering goons have formed an irregular system of co
operatives called syndicates.
Imagine the new, garish, multi storeyed
buildings near Kolkata airport. Obviously, land has been acquired. “Land
losers” have been given a novel compensation. They will supply all the
materials used in the buildings. The infection has spread. No enterprise can
take to Wing without the syndicate’s blessings”.
A senior Bengali academic from the US, confident
that many in Mamata’s administration had once been his students, returned to
Kolkata to have his ancestral house repaired. Work progressed until one day a
dozen peak capped TMC volunteers materialized. How had work begun without their
knowledge?
The professor and his wife called up a
powerful minister, their student. The minister said he was helpless because the
syndicate operated on the directives of a different minister.
This system has replaced the Left cadres.
Indeed, out-of-job cadres have switched sides and joined the syndicate system.
There is great consternation all around.
Obviously, there is loss of support for
her. This explains the conventional wisdom across the board: she will return
with a vastly reduced margin. If it is generally accepted that she is on a down-hill
slope, who can say with certainty where she may land?
She will however not lose support among
Muslims who are over 30 per cent of the state’s population. Talk to Samsuzaman
Ansari, local leader in Matia Burj, where Awadh’s last Nawab, Wajid Ali Shah
was exiled by the British in 1856, and he will list all that Didi has done for
the community.
Did not the Left Front government also
give them protection? Yes, they gave us protection but they also gave us a
mantra:
“Gai ka gosht khaao
CPM ke geet gaao”
(Eat beef to your heart’s content; but
sing the CPM’s praises). That was all.
There is populism all around. She has
improved on the Tamil Nadu Chief Minister Jayalalita’s rural schemes – not just
Rs.2 per kg of rice but even gold bangles for girls.
For the Left Front and the Congress this
could well be their last battle for survival in the state. They have joined
hands in Bengal even though they are in direct conflict in Kerala. There may be
no morality in all of this, but is it practical commonsense?
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