West Bengal: A Disreputable Alliance


The election scene in West Bengal has become clear. The Left Front, which is
confidently conducting its election campaign, is being faced by a new
alliance of the Trinamool Congress and the Congress party. The BJP is also
there in the fray with its minor NDA allies.

The Trinamool has changed partners midway. Till the middle of March, before
the tehelka exposure, Mamata Banerjee had announced the distribution of
seats for the Trinamool-BJP alliance. The BJP had been given 39 seats as its
share. Mamata Banerjee had also made it clear that her pet mahajot idea was
not given up and she hoped that the Congress would still accept her proposal
for an all-in-unity against the Left Front.

The tehelka exposures had a stunning impact on the country. Afraid of the
adverse repercussions of going to the people with the BJP as an ally, Mamata
Banerjee quit the Cabinet and the NDA. While doing so, except for the demand
of the resignation of George Fernandes, Mamata Banerjee did not set out any
other grounds for disassociating from the NDA. It was only the fear of
popular disapproval that kept her away from the BJP. Neither the communal
politics of the BJP nor the anti-people policies of the Vajpayee government
were her concerns.

This has been confirmed in the period after Mamata Banerjee�s resignation.
At no time, even after the announcement of the elections, has she denounced
the BJP�s communal ideology nor attacked its economic policies. The election
manifesto of the Trinamool Congress does not contain any criticism of the
BJP or its policies. Since quitting the NDA, Mamata Banerjee has repeatedly
made it clear that she would like to have an understanding both with the BJP
and the Congress to fight the CPI(M) and the Left Front. In an comprehensive
write-up in the Hindustan Times on April 1, she was quoted as saying: "For
the moment, I completely rule out going with the NDA and the BJP at the
Centre. But nobody can say what will happen in the future. In politics,
there is nothing permanent. But I would have been happy had the BJP and the
Congress been willing to fight with me against the CPI(M) in the assembly
polls". It is with this approach that Mamata Banerjee held talks with the
Congress(I) leadership. She soon found the Congress willing to echo her
standpoint.

Kamal Nath, who was deputed to negotiate the alliance on behalf of the AICC,
declared that defeating the Marxist is the sole aim of the alliance. Not a
word was said against the BJP in the press conference in which he announced
the final understanding.

That this is the line that the Congress has surrendered to, the political
line to accommodate Mamata Banerjee�s single-point aim of an anti-Marxist
front, was confirmed at the inaugural rally of the new opportunist alliance
on April 15. Echoing the views of Mamata, Congress leaders like Pranab
Mukherjee and Somen Mitra declared that the "sole aim of our alliance is to
remove the Left Front" and "we will work unitedly to defeat the CPI(M)-led
Left Front under Mamata Banerjee�s leadership". Not a word was spoken
against the BJP or the Vajpayee government at the Centre.

In striking contrast is election campaign of the CPI(M) and the Left parties
in West Bengal and Kerala. They are concentrating their fire not only
against the Trinamool-Congress alliance and the UDF respectively, but also
vigorously exposing the Vajpayee government�s policies and the communal
danger posed by the BJP.

The Trinamool Congress leaders have made it clear that their understanding
with the BJP remains intact as far as the Calcutta Municipal Corporation and
other elected bodies are concerned. There is no hint of any remorse
self-critical approach regarding the participation of Mamata Banerjee and
Trinamool Congress in the Vajpayee government.

Till March 13, when the tehelka tapes were made public, the Trinamool
Congress was happy and contented to be party to every vicious attack on the
people launched by the Vajpayee government and was busy covering up its
communal agenda. In December, the winter session of Parliament was rocked by
the issue of the three BJP Cabinet Ministers, who are chargesheeted by the
CBI in the Babri Masjid demolition case, continuing in office. Prime
Minister Vajpayee defended the ministers by claiming that the Ram Mandir
movement was an expression of national sentiment. When the Opposition moved
a resolution to censure the government on this matter, the Trinamool voted
with the government in both the Houses of Parliament. It brazenly defended
the likes of L.K. Advani, Murli Manohar Joshi and Uma Bharati remaining in
the Cabinet even though charges are to be framed against them in a special
court at Lucknow.

Even on issues concerning the common people and the working class, the
Trinamool stood with the Vajpayee government while pretending a show of
concern through public statements. Even a fortnight before Mamata�s walking
out of the NDA, the Trinamool Congress had supported the government on the
Balco privatisation scandal. When the Lok Sabha on March 1 voted on the
CPI(M) member Rupchand Pal�s motion against the privatisation of the Balco,
the Trinamool MPs led by Sudip Bandopadhyay voted with the government. As a
prominent newspaper reported, "An understanding was reached between the
Trinamool Congress and the BJP leaders that the party would seek
clarifications from the Minister of State for Disinvestment that no Balco
employee would be fired nor his wages reviewed after the change of
management". Following this, the Trinamool Congress lined up to support the
Vajpayee government on the scandalous sale for a song of a profit-making
public sector unit. The entire working class of the country has noted who
have stood with the workers of Balco and the country�s interests, and who
have connived at this loot of public assets.

Even the pretext of walking out on the issue of corruption on the tehelka
affair will not cut much ice among the people. Leaders of both the Trinamool
Congress and the Congress share a common heritage as far as corruption is
concerned. Both Ajit Panja and Kamal Nath were indicted in the hawala case
by the CBI some years ago. Mamata Banerjee, herself, served a stint as a
member of the Union Cabinet under Prime Minister Narasimha Rao. This
five-year regime of the Congress government has the unique distinction of
fifteen ministers having to resign on a variety of corruption charges and
malpractices.

Thus, it is clear that the reunion of the Trinamool Congress and the
Congress has taken place on the terms set out by Mamata Banerjee, which is a
plain and simple anti-Marxist front. Anti-Communism is the watchword of this
alliance and the BJP, either in West Bengal, or, at the national level, is
not something to be fought.

The Congress has only exposed itself before the country with this pathetic
and dishonourable surrender. Such opportunism is not going to provide it
with even temporary benefits. It will only mean handing over the Congress to
Mamata Banerjee�s brand of hysterical and disruptive anti-communism. Even
Mamata Banerjee�s supporters were aghast when she arrived at an electoral
understanding with the Kamtapuri People�s Party, a party which advocates the
breakup of West Bengal and a front for an underground organisation which
resorts to terror to achieve its goal of a separate state.

The Congress party, like many vanquished rulers of the past, seems incapable
of learning any lessons from its experience. A few years ago, by
compromising with the communal forces on the Ayodhya issue, the Congress
forfeited people�s support in a large measure. By allying with Mamata
Banerjee, who does not deign to hide her willingness to dally with the BJP,
and by clambering on to an anti-Marxist bandwagon, the Congress party will
soon find itself in an unenviable plight.


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