Enemy’s
Enemy Is My Friend: BJP, CPM Target Mamata
Saeed
Naqvi
On the eve of the May, 2016, West Bengal
Assembly elections, Arun Jaitley shared his campaign experiences with some
editors. When he attacked Mamata Bannerjee and the Left-Congress Front in equal
measure, the crowd’s response was tepid. When he attacked TMC for 60 percent of
his speech, there was some applause. But when his speech was 75 percent
invective against the TMC, the applause was thunderous.
The editor who passed on these
“findings” to me was then a key figure in the Kolkata establishment. He was
amplifying something he liked to believe. So opposed to Mamata was he that he claimed
some credit for helping stitch together what was patently an absurd
arrangement: Congress and the CPM would hold hands in Bengal, but fight each
other in Kerala. They were trounced.
Jaitley’s unflattering report about
Mamata’s electoral fortunes can be easily explained. His meetings, obviously
organized by RSS cadres consisted of crowds who were presumably anti Mamata.
His narrative also revealed that, in charting out a future in Bengal, the BJP
saw Mamata as a much more formidable obstacle than the Congress-Left combine.
That outcome is precisely what the BJP
is up against now that Amit Shah is preparing the turf for the 2019 elections.
In this framework, how does the communal
violence following Basirhat play itself out? First, it must be registered that
there have been a dozen or so clashes in the state after Mamata’s reelection. It
must be said to the credit of CPM’s 36 year rule: Communal riots were almost
non existent. Some of what is happening now is clearly part of the BJP’s effort
to create an atmosphere conducive to communal polarization.
It is difficult to see how the BJP can
profit from efforts at Hindu consolidation in a state with anywhere between 30
to 35 percent Muslim population. In the absence of a reliable census, these are
the figures most parties privately cite. Promoting communalism would leave this
bloc vote consolidated exactly where it is: behind Mamata.
Considering that this very same vote
stood four square behind the CPM for 34 years, mostly under the charismatic
Chief Ministership of Jyoti Basu, its support for Mamata need not theoretically
be seen as permanent.
This probably is the desperate hope the
CPM nurses. To enhance Mamata’s vulnerabilities it has thrown its lot with the
BJP: an enemy’s enemy is my friend.
Just as the self defeating formula, CPM
+ Congress, for May, 2016 elections was credited to the CPM secretary General
Sitaram Yechury, the strategy of attacking TMC just when it is in RSS-BJP line
of fire, is widely believed to be the line enunciated by former party Secretary
General Prakash Karat.
Quite clearly the party has not yet
digested the harsh reality that it was trounced by TMC, that Buddhadeb
Bhattacharjee was West Bengal’s Gorbachev. In the rush to reform both had lost
control.
The Marxist government’s conflict with
peasants in Nandigram in March, 2007, set into motion a series of events which
ultimately dethroned the CPM. Karat’s diagnosis was that the anger of Muslim
peasants had been stoked by a combination of Jamiat, TMC and Naxalities.
Muslim peasants, fearful of losing their
lands for a Special Economic Zone, was the basis on which CPML groups worked
hard to mobilize a powerful movement. Jamiat may have played a role since the
peasants were Muslim. The only party in the fray to take electoral advantage
was the TMC.
It was a masterstroke of political
opportunism by Mamata. Having lost the 2006 assembly election, she turned her
fortunes around using Singur and Nandigram as fulcrums.
A leader’s political durability in
Kolkata can sometimes be measured by political currents in neighbouring states
– Tripura for instance.
Possibly inspired by Mamata’s rise, the
President of the Congress in Tripura, Sudip Roy Burman switched to the TMC. But
when he saw the Modi wave sweeping across UP and the TV channels, he turned up
in Guwahati to promise support the BJP’s Presidential candidate Ram Nath
Kovind.
Now, Agartala is rife with rumours that
six TMC MLAs are likely to join the BJP in the coming weeks. In other words,
the BJP, which had no member in the Assembly, will suddenly have six.
This sudden inflation of BJP legislators
will have ample moral support from the rabidly anti Muslim Governor Tathagata
Roy. His recommendation on how Muslim terrorists should be punished, borders on
the Macabre: “Wrap them in pigskin and
bury them face down in Pig’s excreta.”
Tripura has been under CPM rule for the
past 32 years. But the anti CPM vote mostly rallied around the Congress in the
past. As elsewhere in the country (West Bengal too) the Congress has reduced
itself to a virtual non entity in the state. At the grassroots, this space is
being occupied by the energetic BJP cadres. Taking a holistic view, these must
be seen as some of the chinks in the TMC armour.
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