‘No vote for BJP’ helped Trinamool

Item

Title

‘No vote for BJP’ helped Trinamool

Description

In the middle of the election campaign in West Bengal, when top Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) leaders were making daily visits to the State, farmer leaders protesting in Delhi too came calling. The leaders of the Samyukta Kisan Morcha led by Rakesh Tikait and social activist Medha Patkar camped in the State for two days. The leaders held rallies in Nandigram, Singur and Kolkata urging people not to vote for the BJP. Their campaign was ‘no vote for BJP’, and both Mr. Tikait and Ms. Patkar dissuaded people from voting for the BJP. In another development, prominent names of Bengal’s television and film industry came up with a six-minute video song titled ‘Nijerder Mate, Nijeder Gaan ’ , with a message to the electorate emphasising diversity and co-existence in the State. Almost 48 hours after the results of West Bengal Assembly election were declared, the State BJP leadership believes that the coming together of all anti-BJP vote is responsible for the verdict. The Trinamool Congress registered an all-time high voting percentage since the formation of the party by recording 47.9 % votes. The BJP recorded 38.1 % votes, 9.8 % less votes than the State’s ruling party. “What was left of the Left parties and the Congress went to the Trinamool Congress to stop the BJP. Compared to the 2019 Lok Sabha polls, the Left and the Congress vote share dropped by another 5%, which went to the Trinamool, and that has made all the difference,” a top State BJP leader told The Hindu . Political analyst Biswanath Chakraborty said while there could be multiple factors, the “no vote to BJP” campaign by a section of Left supporters and civil society foiled the chances of the saffron party. “The State’s intelligentsia resisted the BJP with full force and so did the mainstream vernacular media,” he said. Among other factors, the fielding of defectors from the Trinamool Congress did not go down well with the electorate. “Most of the defectors who joined the BJP from the Trinamool Congress lost. Only Suvendu Adhikari from Nandigram and Mihir Goswami from Natabari won. More than 30 MLAs who had defected to the BJP were given tickets and only a few won,” said Prof. Chakraborty said. Other issues such as giving tickets to sitting MPs like Babul Supriyo, Locket Chatterjee and former Rajya Sabha MP Swapan Dasgupta also did not go down well with the electorate, experts pointed out. At least three phases of the election were held in the last few days of April, when the Centre’s mismanagement of COVID-19 crisis was all over the media, Prof. Chakraborty said. “This was such an important issue voters could not ignore.”

Publisher

The Hindu

Date

2021-05-05

Coverage

Kolkata