AT A GLANCE 

Panchayat Elections 2008 Final Tally:
* Panchayat Samiti: Total - 329. LF - 189, Opposition - 131, No Result - 9.
* Gram Panchayat: Total - 3220. LF - 1585, Opposition - 1498, No Result - 137.
* Brutalized Singur and Nandigram vote out CPIM's anti-people policies

*                                                            
PANCHAYAT ELECTION 2008 RESULTS AND THE FUTURE OF CPIM
May 26, 2008

By Pinaki Mitra, Sanhati. 

The results of the Panchayat Elections have been declared in West Bengal. Going 
beyond the wildest imaginations of both the ruling Party and the opposition, 
rural Bengal has given its verdict against the CPIM. In its 31 years of 
uninterrupted rule, the Left Front has never taken such a hit. The fact that it 
was unexpected makes the crisis even more critical. 

Naturally, one is forced to revisit all the debates surrounding the Left 
Front's policies in the last two years. In this article, we will probe the 
debates in the light of the Panchayat Elections. We will try to show those 
honest, dedicated Party workers who still build their dreams around the Party 
that the leadership is taking them down a path of certain destruction.

We can begin somewhat like this: how does the CPIM top brass view the election 
results? Even with the bits and pieces of commentary that we have received till 
now, there is much scope for analysis.

1. A part of the leadership has endeavored to portray the results as "not too 
bad". 

That is to say, they are of the opinion that the results have been a little 
below par in some districts, something that can be mended. They would go as far 
as to say that the results have in fact been quite good, if one remembers the 
way the media, reactionaries, and a section of the intellectuals have spread 
false propaganda about the Party. 

We have two things to say about this. 

First: did those who are saying this now warn the Party beforehand? No. Because 
they couldn't predict the impending disaster. Why is it then that they are 
turning away from reality now? Is there any greatness in deluding Party 
workers? Or is it that they themselves do not want to face the fact that they 
are disconnected from the needs and aspirations of impoverished rural people?

Second: Disputing the fact that the results have been bad shows reluctance in 
undertaking a journey of self-criticism and analysis. That is even worse, and 
is the biggest problem of the CPIM. It is treading the well-known path of 
dogmatic politics: an inability to find fault with oneself even as one is fast 
disappearing, or only to recognize those faults as legitimate as one finds 
oneself – to have one's pride hurt in learning from others, particularly any 
opposition. The culture of listening to oppositional criticism with any measure 
of importance has disappeared from the Party. A section of the leadership's 
insistence that the results have not been untoward reflects this averseness to 
self-analysis.

2. The second reaction that has come up from the Party is very common. For a 
long time, this has been the first reaction of the CPIM to any setback. At 
least the people of Bengal have heard this time and again. It is: "The people 
have not understood". Implicit in this is: "We, the Party, have understood". 

The Party program that results from this mockery of self-analysis is: "The 
truth must be explained to the people in a better way".

This process of "explaining" has a number of faces. First it is done with sweet 
words and proper humility. As that doesn't work, the person doing the 
explaining gets impatient. And since what is indisputable above everything is 
that he is right, that he alone is privy to the truth, he cannot understand why 
the people do not understand him – the only reasons seem to be "backwardness" 
(for illiterate villagers) or vested interests (for educated city folk). People 
who do not understand and who will not obey are thus tagged either as 
"backward" or as "reactionary". 

Who will rescue those who have lagged behind but the Party? The Party must 
"force" them to move forward. That cannot be undemocratic, since behind this 
process of coercion is the Party's knowledge of the truth, of what is right and 
what is wrong. Don't parents force children to do the right thing? 

As for the hardened reactionaries, they cannot be convinced – they must be made 
to obey. The process of buying obedience cannot always remain peaceful. In any 
case, a case of violence for the greater good has already been made in the 
Party's mind.

It is in this way that an apparently democratic and humble viewpoint carries 
within itself the seeds of violence and coercion.

3. For the first time in two years, a section of the CPIM leadership have 
acknowledged "arrogance" as a reason for their disconnect with the masses. But 
the arrogance mentioned has been the arrogance of lower-level Party workers.

It goes without saying that this tactic of denying their own faults is far from 
reality. The leadership itself has been far more arrogant. Starting from the 
famous "We're 235, they're 30 – who will stop us?" to the inhuman "Paid back in 
their own coin" and Konar's "We'll make their lives a living hell" and the 
recent remarks from the Party about the Governor or about Swajan, it is beyond 
a shadow of doubt that on the list of arrogant people it is Buddhadeb 
Bhattacharya, Biman Basu, Benoy Konar, and Shyamal Chakraborty who come on top. 
That is, if one leaves out people like Subhas Chakraborty and Lakshman Seth, 
any mention of whom in a context of Leftist politics can only pollute and 
vitiate the discussion.

One can say that they have very willfully percolated their arrogance to the 
lower level cadres. During the whole Nandigram crusade, they inspired the Party 
to higher and higher levels of barbarity by daily doses of calls for violence. 
The recapture of Nandigram with anti-social elements was justified by taking 
the Party to a state of war-like frenzy. "An eye for an eye" – that was the 
tune to which the entire Party marched, believing that it was a Peoples Army 
that was marching in Nandigram, when in reality it was the Party's criminals 
and mercenaries who were marching. 

They believed that if once Nandigram could be captured assertively, then it 
could be converted to another Keshpur. Rural Bengal would get the message that 
opposition to land-acquisition would meet the same violent fate. 

It goes without saying that the leadership's strategy was short-sighted. And 
when today they pass the buck to their lower level members, it shows their 
inability to take responsibility.

4. Conspiracy Theories: 

For the last two years, the CPIM leadership has continuously explained to their 
members that right-wing reactionaries and the ultra-Left have joined hands, and 
in collusion with the "ruling classes", undertaken a program of false 
propaganda against the Party. 

The Party believes, as mentioned earlier, that it alone knows the true Leftist 
path. It alone knows what is good for the people, and it alone works to protect 
their interests. And since this conflicts with the interests of the "ruling 
classes", the result is false propaganda.

At first this theory couldn't be propped up properly. The first question one 
asked was: weren't the interests of the ruling classes being hurt before? Why 
is it that now the ruling classes have gone on the offensive? Why is it that 
even those intellectuals who were preaching for the Left Front in 2006 have 
suddenly become members of the "ruling classes"? Especially when, the program 
of industrialization that the CPIM has undertaken can only make big capital 
happy, and it is in fact making them happy. From the CII to the Bengal Chamber 
of Commerce, all organizations of industrialists have praised Buddhadeb 
Bhattacharya and Nirupam Sen with unreserved sincerity.

The 123 Treaty and the US hand could not have come at a more opportune moment. 
In the style of the classic heart-stopping whodunit, the theory was proposed 
that since the CPIM was opposing the 123 Treaty, Uncle Sam had funded the 
Trinamul Congress, the Maoists, and the civil society to weave a web of 
conspiracy. Innovative, no doubt. The problem is, the debacle in the Panchayat 
Elections is being explained by this theory and focus is being removed from 
self-analysis. The more the CPIM relies on such imaginative leadership, the 
more it will face such debacles – one doesn't need to know too much about 
politics to understand that.

5. The results and the policy of industrialization and land-grab. 

As of now, the little one gets from the newspapers shows that there is 
acrimonious debate over this inside the Party. One section claims that 
land-acquisition played no role in the election results. Purulia, Bankura, West 
Midnapur – places where land has been acquired or will be – have voted for the 
CPIM. And in South 24 Parganas – where the issue hasn't even come up – the 
Party has faced a debacle. This shows a lack of correlation between the issue 
of land-grab and the election results. Another section disagrees and claims 
that the events that unfolded around the issue of land-grab created fear in the 
minds of people, the overall reflection of which was shown in the Panchayat 
Election results.

Clearly, the first section, who are speaking for land-grab and 
industrialization centered on big capital, are the majority. This section is 
without doubt quite won over by the perceived virtues of capitalism. They don't 
give two hoots about things like revolution etc. That isn't on their agenda. 
They believe firmly that whatever can be done must be done within the 
parliamentary setting, and thus remaining in power is the final word (they do 
not always say as much, due to lingering embarrassment over claims of being 
Marxists). To them, being "Leftists" implies at most an effort to have a 
government that is a tiny bit more pro-people than the Right. How much they 
have succeeded in doing that is on open display.

This section never had any qualms about grabbing land at any cost for 
capital-centered industrialization (manufacturing or real estate). They still 
have no second thoughts or guilt, and will brook no delay. They have completely 
internalized the following classic dictates of neoliberalism:

(a) All other States are bending over, giving concessions to big capital. If we 
don't, industrialists won't come. We will be "left behind".
(b) Whatever be the costs of land-grab and displacement, "trickle down" will 
ensure greater employment in the long run. Thus, people who lose their 
livelihoods will be reabsorbed somehow.

Clearly, this is a capitulation to neoliberalism and has nothing to do with 
Marxism, working class, etc. What is sad is that in an all-India scenario, it 
is by dealing with these questions that the Left differentiates itself from the 
Right. The CPIM leadership has such unshakeable faith in the above two dictates 
that even amidst the debacle of the elections, they have asserted that 
land-grab must be done with renewed vigor for the sake of industrialization, 
and that that is the way out of the crisis.

The second section, which believes that land-grab is the reason behind the 
debacle, is further divided into two parts. One part doesn't oppose land-grab. 
From a political point of view, nothing much sets them apart from the first 
section. But they are willing to go slow. They want to "explain" to the people 
the truth that they alone understand, they want to take people with them by 
conviction and not coercion. They have been won over by neoliberalism, but 
unlike the first section, they would rather preach than shoot – in that sense, 
some semblance of a democratic mentality has lingered on. And it within this 
part – a minority within a minority – that there are some members who are 
totally against the industrialization policy or are vacillating. They play no 
role in setting the direction of the Party. According to this writer, it is 
this section of the CPIM that is the most progressive within the Party, and 
whether the CPIM will ever play any role in the Communist movement in India 
depends on how vocal this section is, and whether it can raise itself to a 
position of influencing Party policy.

**********************************

Let us now come to what we have to say.

The section of the leadership which has tried to convince people that 
land-acquisition did not influence the election results are making a mistake. 
Bankura, Purulia, West Midnapur – the land taken there has often been 
non-cultivable. We do not have examples where land-acquisition in those places 
has led to loss of livelihood of people. On the other pole is Singur, where six 
people have already died due to lack of healthcare or depression and suicide. 
In Nandigram, people would have had to part with their lives, land, livelihood 
– everything. In Dankuni too plans are underway. People in all three places 
have rejected the CPIM in the elections. Thus, the verdict is clearly against 
displacement.

Along with this is the undemocratic, muscle-flexing face of land-acquisition, 
the pulverization of local resistance by the police and the Party's 
anti-socials, the barbaric "Nandigram Line". People have been terrorized, they 
have become angry, and their hatred has shown itself in the polls. Of course 
there are other reasons – the ration riots, the Sachar Committee Report, the 
dissatisfaction of the CPIM's allies, etc.

But those who only wish to place importance on other reasons, and thus take 
focus away from the afore-mentioned ones, are only furthering the cause of big 
capital.

It is not possible for any party to at once advance the cause of neoliberalism 
and to hold on to the loyalties of working people indefinitely. This is clear 
in every state of India. Side by side, it is also partially true, albeit 
undemonstrated, that if a party were to give priority to the causes of the 
working class, industrialists would boycott them. 

The CPIM has abandoned the interests of the disadvantaged primarily due to 
three reasons:

1. The CPIM believes that whatever jobs big capital can create, the associated 
glamour and extent of investment are capable of creating an aspiration, an 
aspiration that gives many people the hope of getting jobs. Marginalized people 
are constantly entering and exiting the circle of aspiration surrounding big 
capital. If the Party has the keys to this movement, then it can maintain its 
influence on the marginal. This was how it was possible to be on the side of 
big capital and still have control over working people till now. It is clear 
that till 2006, this formula worked fine.

2. The CPIM could not have imagined that this process of industrialization 
could have caused such sufferings just during its preparation, far from its 
fruition. The fact that this suffering created such a gulf between them and the 
people was also not on the cards. There was no understanding of the possibility 
that a government could face dismantling even after following the path of big 
capital. Rather, they thought that this was the most certain way of remaining 
in power. Perhaps due to their organizational strength and the resultant 
self-belief.

3. The third reason is perhaps the most critical. Leftists have always 
acknowledged the government as another tool for struggle. There are many tools 
of struggle, and the government is one. But the CPIM leadership has for a long 
time put every other means in the back burner. They have theorized thus: 
"relief" is no longer a temporary or intermediate issue, it is the permanent 
issue. The aim is to remain in power in a long-lasting government. A Party for 
which this is the be-all and end-all, coupled with the habituation of 
thirty-one long years, is expectedly terrified at the thought of not being in 
the government.

In conclusion, then, this is what they have become: it is fine to not build a 
movement with workers and peasants. It is sufficient if influence is maintained 
(in other words if the votes keep coming in). If big capitalist development 
gives that certainty, why not! In the factories, it is sufficient to hold on to 
influence without engaging in workers movements, but simply by maintaining 
bargaining power with the management and contracting part-time workers. It is 
sufficient to hold on to influence without any peasants movements, but simply 
by controlling the dispensation of job possibilities, government schemes, and 
aid. 

This path has been followed successfully for the last twenty years. What the 
CPIM has failed to understand is that the selflessness of struggle and the 
influence born of power are not the same things. And that when big capital 
advances, even "relief" programs fall flat on their faces. Then the people 
cannot be bought over by dispensing relief. What is needed is a movement. 
Because they have failed to grasp this, the working class has long since 
started to abandon the CPIM. From the 1990's itself, when VRS was used in the 
factories to lay off workers while CITU leaders were busy explaining that 
movements could not be made, if they were the factories would shut down. And 
now it is the turn of the peasantry. One or two land-grabs have made the CPIM 
wobbly, demonstrating clearly the shallowness of relief schemes. 

The West Bengal CPIM is thus facing a crisis that they have never faced 
previously, that questions many areas of their central politics. The advance of 
big capital has made the limitations of relief politics clear. They are 
confronted by some clear questions:

1. Will they stand for big capital or for peasants and workers? (The days of 
appeasing both are drawing to an end).

2. Will they cling on to the government at any cost? Or will they lead working 
people in their struggle – in the face of possible threat of boycott by big 
industrialists?

3. Like a right-wing government, and with other right-wing governments, will 
they continue the competition of giving concessions to industrialists and 
making SEZs? Or will they stand with the various anti-SEZ struggles, big and 
small, that are growing all over the country, stand with all the peasant 
movements that are growing up against displacement? 

It is the answers to these questions that will determine the fate of the CPIM.

At a glance 


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