"The scale of its victory could induce the Left Front into a kind of euphoria. It is however relevant to draw attention to a number of emerging facts:
(a) While the Front has registered a major triumph in this year’s poll, it is not an unprecedented achievement. For example,
in 1987 the Front captured 251 of the 294 seats in the assembly; this time, the tally has been only 235. And there have been
other occasions too in the past when the Front obtained more than 50 per cent of the total votes cast.
(b) A large proportion of the Front government’s efforts and resources has over the past five years been expended
to improve the infrastructure in and around Kolkata, including for the establishment of luxury facilities which could seduce the upper-class mind, especially industry circles. This apparently pro-rich and pro-big industry bias in the state government’s policies has borne little fruit though in electoral terms. The Front actually has won in 2006 a lesser number of seats in Kolkata than it did in the past. The areas where civic improvements such as flyovers, sleek modern roads, shopping plazas and suchlike are concentrated continue to vote with a vengeance against the Left Front. The Front therefore faces a dilemma: to increase further the outlay on luxury facilities might fail to yield electoral dividends, while the relative curtailment of outlay intended for the poor could lead to a rapid erosion of its “safe” vote bank.
(c) The issue of conversion, at state initiative, of arable land for commercial exploitation, the poll results suggest, should
be handled with some circumspection. In the rural belt of South 24 Parganas, the Left Front lost in just a single constituency,
Bhangar, partly because of the involvement of this location in the controversy. Similarly, while the Front made a clean
sweep of the rest of the seats in the district of Howrah, it failed to win in two constituencies where the issue of land sales had
cropped up.
(d) The state government has apparently made up its mind to pursue a vigorous programme of generally capital-intensive
industrial growth with focus on the IT industry. It has, simultaneously, made explicit its determination to make the
state more investor-friendly. The state administration, it follows, would from now on allocate a relatively higher
proportion of its resources in the pursuit of these goals. What impact such a policy is likely to have on the life and
living of close to seven million unemployed in the state remains an open question. The surprise defeat of the state labour minister, along with the loss of a number of seats on the fringes of Kolkata, should provide some sort of a warning. It is possible to trace an undercurrent of resentment at the resulting bias – howsoever unintentional – for labour economising industrialisation; there is similar disquiet over hasty handing over of lush agricultural land either for “contract farming” or to fly-by-night adventurers from other shores.
(e) Above all, the mandate the Left Front has won, in the view of a vast number of its rank and file, is a mandate for Left
principles. Any deviation from these principles, such as a diminution of the role of the public sector in the development
agenda, could meet with fierce internal resistance. The seventh Left Front government therefore must continuously watch
its steps."
You have indeed raised quite a few important points. I would like to say a few things:
1) You have rightly said that electoral results should not to be interpreted in a flat manner to understand politics, otherwise the analysis will be fraught with many mistakes. And I think you have committed the mistake which you were wary of. Was the 2006 WB result a mandate for an industrialization led by forceful acquisition of fertile land, was it a mandate to fire upon unwilling farmers, or was it a mandate to bring more and more of such industries of neo-liberal model? The question is not pro-industry or anti-industry, but industry of what nature; because anybody, even an idiot according to Ashok Mitra, can understand the importance of industries. If 2006 was a verdict for industries, it was for a model that is definitely not of neoliberal order. Was it too much of expectation from the people, that is if it was indeed so, to a government led by Left parties who are avowed to fight against neoliberalism? Hence I think the argument made in the article holds fine, and that is what Manik Sarkar intended to say: we have not done anything which people did not expect us to do. So one needs to read electoral results carefully, yes, but not stop reading it. In that way, reading electoral verdicts wont create the contradiction which you seem to suggest.
2) I am generally averse to seeing commitment and progressiveness only abstractly. Those are not good enough if that does not lead to betterment of peoples' lives. And I do not think that the LF in WB has been in the government by merely speaking about abstract commitment and progressiveness. Those have been transformed into tangible outcomes in peoples' lives for the better. For example, Left's 'abstract' stand on secularism has reflected in drastic reduction of communal violence/riots in the states; or food security; or issue of land etc. Those are better than perhaps any state in the country. The point is, no political analysis can be sans analyzing concrete outcomes that change peoples' lives.
And there are failures. And there are other states ruled by other political outfits that out-shines WB on certain indicators that indicate living conditions of the masses. Should we not be concerned by that? Those are the aspects on which LF could and should have emphasized, like a state ruled by the same political formation (Tripura), rather than trying to implement the neoliberal logic.
3) And then, of course, there are deviations, which you mentioned. Did those deviations bring larger electoral fortunes? Well I tend to believe even electorally we would have been better of without those. Otherwise, why do we believe in democratic mandate of the people? And that is precisely why, as you rightly said, left should ponder upon "such uncomfortable questions". Can't agree with you more on that. But I do not think anybody has tried to reduce that story of ideological deviation as merely 'post 2001' or so. What is hammered upon here, I think, is to underline the contrast which wins peoples mandate. And that is evident even in an analysis of 'restricted' scope. That is of course valuable.
The observations made by Mr. Prasenjit Bose are correct in more than one way. There is much to read from the results of the bye elections other than any cause for jubilation on the part of the Left establishment of Bengal. Like, the results show, the Left has won one seat of Nalhati, but the size of their vote has further declined. Interestingly if anyone follows the results of 2011 Vidhansabha elections, the best Left performance was recorded in Rejinagar. At Rejinagar the current results show even a sharp and further drop in the votes for the left. Across the three constituencies the drop in the net vote for the left is significant. In the regional media the left representatives tried to appear brave by arguing that the results should be regarded as the symbol of people's disenchantment with the AITC government as the anti government vote is more. This logic is like building castles in the air. because by the same logic the anti left vote has nearly doubled in comparison to 2011. There are many causes at play. Taking cue from Mr. Bose's argument I would like to reiterate that the trend clearly shows the fall out of the Bengal left's apathy (which was set in from arond mid eighties) towards building social progressive movements. Also a fact that Bengal's electoral terrain is changing pretty fast. The trend can be explained elsewhere, but for this comment I would rest by saying that the politics of Bengal is not limited with the scope of CPI(M), AITC or INC. It is changing. The factors are visbly and invisbly displayed along the election outcomes post 2011. Left establishment should think deep as another fact which no one has emphasized about the current bye election results is that each constituency i.e. Nalhati, Rejinagar and Englishbazar has seen at an average 6% increase from 2011 in terms of voters participation. The Left establishment should face up to this complex terrain. I conclude by reiterating that politics of Bengal is not remaining within the scope of AITC and CPI(M). It is happening to be more.
Thanks for your informative and well-argued piece on the election results in Tripura. I believe it will contribute to a healthy and wide-ranging debate on the Indian left - it's past, present and future. Allow me to point out, however, that while I appreciated the piece, it left me with a certain sense of disappointment. While I am no cpim loyalist, i could not help but discern a certain unwarranted simplification in your analysis. Kindly permit me to identify the nature of this simplification.
While it is certainly the case that success and failure in electoral politics is very important to the fortunes of a political movement in a country like India, and that the left has to make sincere efforts to present itself as an electorally viable alternative, reducing political analysis to a purely psephological exercise is a path fraught with perils and contradictions. And I believe your article suffers to some extent from this problem. For instance, you draw a connection, which is central to your analysis, between the declining electoral fortunes, be it seats or vote share, of the left front in Bengal, and a certain rightward shift in cpim embodied most strikingly, according to you, in its pro-industrialisation drive. This to me seems an oversimplification. Such an analysis cannot account at all for extremely significant events like the landslide victory of the left front in the 2006 state elections. Remember the left front contested the 2006 elections almost solely on the plank of industrialisation. Before the elections the cpim had gone on an extensive and aggressive campaign projecting 'brand Buddha' as the way forward for the state. Now, if electoral performance were the sole criterion for judging the correctness and mass acceptance of an ideological-political line, the 2006 results could have been read as an overwhelming mandate for industrialisation. And maybe the cpim did read it in such a manner. The point, however, is that by continuing to operate in such a frame of analysis, we will be imposing an unnecessary constraint on our vision - thereby scuttling the prospects of a serious and productive debate.
Secondly, as a sympathiser of left politics, I have some problems with the kind of abstraction with which socio-economic indicators are being looked at. Now, to be sure, in the long run the ideological commitment of a political force would have a bearing on the welfare of the people. The whole left project is about such a transformation. But does that warrant seeing a mechanical one-on-one correspondence between commitment and socio-economic indicators? I would not think so. Remember that even apart from tripura, there are several states - for instance states like Tamil nadu, Maharashtra, uttarakhand, Himachal Pradesh, Goa etc. - which fare much better than West Bengal on a range of socio-economic indicators. On several such indicators, these states fare even better than Kerala and Tripura. None of these states, of course, has ever had a left government. Now, if socio-economic indicators were the sole criterion for judgment, forces like the DMK would seem far more progressive than the cpim. If the socio-economic statistics in Tripura prove something, what do the statistics in these other states prove? The problem is that we on the left have systematically shied away from even asking ourselves these questions. And the same reluctance seems to lurk in your article.
Finally, such reluctant analysis takes us farther away from historically concrete political analysis. It is quite strange that most of your comparative statistics begin from 2001. Why is that? The statistics for instance tell us that on these socio-economic indicators west Bengal did not fare particularly well even before 2001. And, of course, by 2001, the left front government had already finished around 25 years - enough time to carry out thoroughgoing work on health, education, sanitation etc. Let me remind you that even by 2001, Kerala, where the left had enjoyed a much shorter duration in power, had enormously outpaced west Bengal as far as socio-economic indicators were concerned. To me this this suggests that problems in west Bengal go far deeper than just the pro-industrialisation stance of leaders post-2001. Several political commentators have observed, for instance, that a certain undesirable electorally motivated reformism had crept into the agrarian agenda of the cpim in the eighties itself. There was a distinct shift in the policy of the cpim, in the eighties, from isolating the dominant agrarian classes to winning them over. This led to tremendous electoral gains, of course, but it diluted the agenda of agrarian change, and led to a widespread ideological-political slackening within the cpim. Could such ideological debilitation have been responsible for the abandonment of certain crucial tasks of social welfare even in the eighties and nineties, a time when the left front used to win comfortably? Could this class reformism have had something to do with the left's far from robust performance on the questions of the emancipation of Dalits, tribals, minority communities etc. even in the first two decades of its rule?
I believe that the left has to urgently raise and answer such uncomfortable questions. Easy and neat dichotomies between pre-2001 and post-2001, between Tripura and Bengal, between buddadeb and jyoti Basu, while they may seem explanatorily tempting and attractive, are not really of much value.
"it could win more seats. i want to ask - what matters more to you - winning more seats or retaining a better vote percentage? your recipe for the left is not based in the realities of Indian politics but in an esoteric approach which would render the left politically irrelevant in parliamentary politics."
People like you only expose how sections of the CPI(M) have slipped into the worst kind of Parliamentary deviations. When one hopes for a political revival of the CPIM people like you come in and shatter all hopes. Considering Rahul Gandhi's and Sitaram's frequent meetings are according to you a sign of the revival of the left, I really wish you'd revise your understanding of a left movement.
I really don't know what you mean. While, unlike the CPI(M), I am not really against the creation of smaller states but to assume that smaller states bring in better governance is not always entirely true. Look at the kind of war against the people that has been unleashed by the state in the newly created smaller states like Jharkhand and Chattisgarh. The very tribal populations that were supposed to be benefiting from the creation of these states have been the most deprived after the formation of these states. Also look at Uttrakhand. It was created with the intention of the hill people not losing out on development to the people in the plains in U.P. After Uttarakhand's creation even now the bulk of industrialisation and job creation has happened in places like Haridwar etc.- Among the few plains areas of Uttarakhand.
About better governance in smaller states- Is that really true? Look at Goa? There's been a continuous, almost tragi-comedy kind of musical chairs that we've seen with the CM's of the state. Look at how the mining lobby of Goa is ruling the state today and the good governance of Goa only exists for the tourists.
In the context of reverses in West Bengal, the 20th Party Congress of the CPI(M) resolved the following in its Political Resolution: '...the strengthening of the CPI(M) and the recovering of the ground lost by the Left assume importance....Learning from experience, we should overcome the weaknesses at the political and organisational level and reestablish our links with the people who have got alienated.'
However, like many other aspects of the Political Resolution, it appears that the task of reestablishing links with the alienated people has also taken a backseat. The recent bye-elections show that the mass base of the Left is eroding further. This erosion cannot be the basis of any recovery. The suggestion that people's support can be ignored and the Left can still win through opportunistic parliamentary manipulations exemplifies what is wrong with the CPI(M) today. The realities of parliamentary democracy are predicated upon support among the people. With declining people's support, no Party can have a future, leave alone a Left party.
The sooner the CPI(M) prioritizes winning back its declining support in west bengal, the better. Ignoring or being in denial of this basic fact will not help. Correct lessons need to be drawn from the recent election results. Correct lessons needed to be drawn from all previous election results as well. This article provides some serious food for thought to all those who are genuinely concerned about the future of the Left. Prasenjit should continue to write such excellent articles and give voice to opinions within the ranks of the Party that are often steamrolled and ignored by the cynics.
you seem to have misread the argument regarding social indicators made in the article. consider the fact that in 2001 the literacy rate in Tripura was 73% while in West Bengal it was 68%. in 2011 the literacy rate in Tripura improved to 87% while in West Bengal it was 77%. therefore while the proportion of literate people in Tripura and West Bengal was at a similar level in 2001, by 2011 a much higher proportion of people were literate than in West Bengal. Similarly, the proportion of households with electricity in 2001 was 41% in Tripura and 37% in West Bengal - comparable levels. by 2011, the proportion improved to 68% in Tripura but only 54% in West Bengal. If relative population sizes matter so much for these indicators, what explains the similarity of literacy rates or access to electricity in Tripura and West Bengal in 2001? the difference in population sizes was there in 2001 too. the fact is that the quality of life was better for a much higher proportion of population of Tripura in 2011 than that of West Bengal, while it was roughly similar in 2001.
the comparison between West Bengal and Tripura becomes relevant because both were governed by the same political coalition - the LF. the rapid improvement in development indicators in Tripura compared to West Bengal between 2001 and 2011 must have something to do with policy priorities of the two governments. what has population size got to do with the fact that Tripura was the Nos. 1 state in India in implementing MNREGA while West Bengal was a laggard? it is an issue of political will.
please do not try to obfuscate ideological-political factors by hiding behind inane arguments like "small states have a better quality of administration". if the size of a state is the sole determinant of the quality of administration and improved social indicators, then the policy conclusion should be to divide the existing states into states of the size of Tripura in the interest of the people - i.e. to make a state out of every district in India! fortunately, that is not the case, which can be seen from the experiences of many of the smaller states, be it Sikkim or Jharkhand. moreover, administrative convenience has never been the sole basis of state formation; there are historical, political, cultural factors.
"even if the left vote witnesses a further decline, the fact that the TMC and the Congress contested separately, made it possible for the Left to win one seat. in our parliamentary politics, winning is all that matters, not the percentage of votes received."
response: winning seats matter the most. but the fact is that you are bound to lose seats if your vote share declines. when the LF got around 50% vote in west bengal it could win over 200 seats. when LF's voteshare fell to 41% in 2011, its seats also fell to 60. If the voteshare declines further, it will naturally imply even lesser seats. Moreover, the strength of a political party in a state cannot be judged solely on the basis of seats. Congress won 42 seats in 2011 elections compared to 40 won by the CPI(M). Do you think that therefore Congress became a bigger political party in West Bengal compared to the CPI(M)?
"as reported in the press, rahul gandhi has been frequenting com. Sitaram Yechury's chamber regularly in recent times. if the left manages to keep the TMC and the Congress from striking an understanding with the Congress in west bengal, wouldn't this be the best strategy to remain relevant for the Left? it could win more seats."
response: if reports regarding rahul gandhi "frequenting" the CPIM leader is correct, it is indeed surprising, because that CPIM leader is currently leading a "Sangharsh Sandesh" jatha against the policies of the Congress-led government from Mumbai! People will see through such hypocrisy and punish rather than reward the CPIM for this. besides, your understanding that the left can "manage" to keep the TMC and Congress away from each other is fallacious. that is not the way political alliances operate. TMC and Congress will come together or contest separately in keeping with their own political interests at the state or the national level. There is precious little the Left can do about it. The Left will only expose its weakness if it asserts that the only way it can win more seats is by preventing an alliance between TMC and Congress. Rather than winning more seats, the Left will continue to suffer erosion.
"i want to ask - what matters more to you - winning more seats or retaining a better vote percentage? your recipe for the left is not based in the realities of Indian politics but in an esoteric approach which would render the left politically irrelevant in parliamentary politics."
response: what matters for the Left is to reverse the declining trend in its popular support. if the support and voteshare of the Left starts increasing again, it will naturally lead to more seats for the Left. what is indeed esoteric - at least for the people of west bengal - is the continuing humbug by a section of the Left of its imminent resurgence, by dividing the TMC and the Congress. that is why popular support for the Left continues to decline and which, if not reversed soon, will surely make it politically irrelevant. how much the likes of you understand "the realities of Indian politics" is there for all to see: you seem to have no concern for the fact that the erosion of support for the Left in West Bengal continues unabated.
I am most surprised at the logic of your arguement. The creation of small states in our country has decisively shown over time that irrespective of the ideology or politics of the party in power, they have a better quality of administration and deliver better results to the people. The better social indicators of Tripura are based in the simple FACT that Tripura is a small state while West Bengal is a large one. Kindly stop insinuating ideological-political reasons for the same.
even if the left vote witnesses a further decline, the fact that the TMC and the Congress contested separately, made it possible for the Left to win one seat. in our parliamentary politics, winning is all that matters, not the percentage of votes received. as reported in the press, rahul gandhi has been frequenting com. Sitaram Yechury's chamber regularly in recent times. if the left manages to keep the TMC and the Congress from striking an understanding with the Congress in west bengal, wouldn't this be the best strategy to remain relevant for the Left? it could win more seats. i want to ask - what matters more to you - winning more seats or retaining a better vote percentage? your recipe for the left is not based in the realities of Indian politics but in an esoteric approach which would render the left politically irrelevant in parliamentary politics.
Two times he became CM of kerala, but he could not finish tenure. But he led communist movement all over India very successfully. Even today communist party did not get this kind of intelligent man. He has good knowledge about marxism. But indian condition is very different, he identified that also. He was not good speaker, but his brain played important role. He has good language skill, especially he can talk, Malayalam, Sanskrit, Tamil, Hindi and English. When party will get this kind of genius.
Workers joined work en masse on the 21st once the transport sector has been kept under the purview of the strike. A few Ranadive-ites think that their echo-chambers reflect in an authentic manner the views of the workers. Workers understand more than anybody that these strikes are not going to help them and hence they defied the strike. Working Class struggles in the 21st century are not about calling bandhs and forcing a shutdown - thats the cardinal mistake Ranadive-ites are making.
All the left and progressive force of the country must condemn the hanging of Afzal Guru by the Government of India. This act was a political, and not a legal act. Behind it lay a desperate need to drum up nationalist hype, as the popularity of the Congress led UPA government steadily disappears, as working class anger leads to repeated strikes and even general strikes, called even by bureaucratic union leaders, as middle class anger sometimes goes in the direction of the BJP and at other times in seemingly non-party, but definitely anti-Congress directions. Just like the hanging of Kasab, or the decision to introduce death penalty in rape and murder cases, this is a political act. It is significant that the government condones rape in uniform, with Chidambaram saying that in view of the army not coming to a consensus, the AFSPA rape cases cannot be covered. In the same way, Guru, who was, even by the extremely flawed legal process he faced, found guilty only of being involved in a alleged conspiracy, was nonetheless condemned to be hanged, while Babu Bajrangi and Maya Kodnani, found guilty of directly inciting riots, have not been condemned to be hanged. We do not call for their hanging either. But we point out that this is very clearly a case where Muslims will be punished more severely than Hindus, for not only same crimes but even lesser crimes. Even by existing law, death penalty can only be given in rarest of rare cases. But Guru was not one who fired a shot or threw a bomb. He was not present at the scene. Even by prosecution evidence his role was peripheral. The court ruled that he did not belong to a terrorist organisation. In addition, it must be remembered that Guru was not represented at the trial court by a lawyer. He was tortured into producing a confession which stank so much that even India’s higher courts impugned it. And yet he was sentenced to death. And this was ordered by the Supreme Court, in a terrible language, when it said that he must be hanged for the "collective conscience of society"
Guru was also denied the full legal and procedural rights one is supposed to get. If a clemency petition is rejected, and if the person is properly informed, there are opportunities for judicial review. Guru was denied this opportunity.His family members were not informed about the hanging and his body was not handed over to them.
We should also condemn the day long violence on those who raised their voices in protest, such as the arrest of S.A.R. Geelani, or the violence on Gautam Navlakha, and the house arrests in Kashmir.
We must demand
· End secretive hangings
· Hand over Afzal Guru’s body to his relatives
· Immediately release everyone arrested in connection with protests over the hangings
· Take action to punish those who attacked and those policemen who were complicit in the attacks, at Jantar Mantar
All democratic Indians must be urged to join a campaign to abolish the death penalty, in view of the extremely selective, flawed and politically motivated manner in which death penalty is carried out, even apart from any principled opposition to it that many have.
Class Struggle versus Serving the Rulers and Becoming Regional Linguistic Chauvinist: The Retreat of CITU in the coming General Strike
The media has praised the wisdom of the CPI(M) and the CITU. The taming of the Bengal CPI(M) takes one more step forward. Taken in conjunction with the interview of the former Chief Minister of West Bengal, Buddhadev Bhattacharjee, to ABP Ananda, it marks an important stage in the transition of the CPI(M). From a Stalinist party, it had long been converted into a party with Stalinist organisational structures but wedded to social liberalism. However, it had so far been compelled to accept the pressure from its working class electoral base to a larger extent than the so-called modernisers wanted. In course of the long period of being a government party, however, certain changes had occurred, and now they have caught up. On one hand, the CPI(M) in government had protected strikes and bandhs when called by itself or its controlled mass organisations. As a result, the habit of really fighting militant battles, even militant economic battles, had given way to mock battles on the part of the CITU leaders. On the other hand, the party, serving the ruling class for years, even while extracting small prices, had been gradually transformed. This was becoming evident in the last years of the left front government. Buddhadev Bhattacharjee had already been stressing the need for greater labour discipline, the need for industry in the interests of the working people, and similar themes.
What, at this point a CPI(M) supporter will get up to say, are we to do then? Should we not have industries? What will happen to us? Where will we get jobs? How will we eat? Certainly, we need jobs. We need a living wage. Is that not what the general strike is all about? There is profit galore. Tax breaks make sure that capitalists do not lose out. The argument that we must first ensure that the capitalists make a profit and only then can we make a living wage, however, leads us to only one possible end. There is an international competition among capitalists. If “our” capitalists are to make profits at above the average rate of profit, then the solution lies in the use of superior technology which will mean an increase in relative surplus value, or in driving down our wages more and more. The Chinese “socialist” model upheld by Bhattacharjee and his friends is based on years of bureaucratic control that ensured that capitalist restoration went apace while trade union rights were ignored. If Chinese workers have received anything extra, that is because from 2010, there have been important working class struggles, not because of saviours from above.
The CPI(M)’s pressure and the CITU’s retreat tells us, first of all, that the CITU is a bureaucratic trade union more responsive to the CPI(M) than to the workers who are supposedly its members. Secondly, it shows that the relationship between CPI(M) and CITU, is not just bureaucratic, but that even over core labour issues, nowadays, the pressure of “greater’ interests prevail. One formal reason for cutting down the strike is particularly significant, for it shows the triumph of petty bourgeois “national” identity voer class. The strike will be restricted on 21 February because it is Bhasha Divas, says Bhattacharjee. Note, this means transport workers, wbho are parts of the working class, are being asked not to go on strike. To say that means, to argue that the Bengali national identity, remembered only as a reflex (given that it was in East Bengal/East Pakistan/Bangladesh that the battle over language was fought, while the reality of petty bourgeois Bengal is that apart from this one day, it is hardly concerned with Bengali), and given further that a large part of the working class is not Bengali speaking, in whose interest and why is the strike being restrained ?
It could be argued that the decision to call a general strike cum bandh was erroneous, that the working class struggle had not peaked where such a struggle becomes really viable. That would take us into other areas. The point is, these are not the reasons why the CPI(M) has pressurized the CITU. As long as the CITU commands the support of a considerable part of the working class, the CITU cannot be ignored. But when this allegiance of workers is used to betray them in the interests of the ruling class, and in the interests of electoral support from the Bengali speaking petty bourgeoisie, the intelligentsia who had turned to the TMC in 2009 and 2011, it is essential that militant workers become aware of the reality.
what is your position on SEZ to IT-companies in west bengal?
weather its benefitial to bengali prospective technical students and unemployed technical gradduates?
I hope you know that Buddhadeb Bhattacharya and the CITU unit of West Bengal are not observing the strike on 21st Feb because of international language day.....the great leader Buddhadeb is openly advocating setting up of SEZs in West Bengal...not a word has come from his, in his (in)famous interview for 4 hours to two consecutive Bengali TV channels about the all-India jathas, the movement for food security, the killing of 85 comrades in WB....and our great leader Prakash Karat is conspicuously silent and people like you would defend this kind of complete subversion to bourgeois values, in the name of discipline....i only hope that you and others identify, before it is too late who are the Gorbachevs and Yeltsins of WB and India are!! unless u do so, the day is not far when Buddhadebs of the world will liquidate the party and you will continue to adhere to the disciplines of a non-existent communist party....
Your vicious attack on any initiative that is constructively critical of the CPI(M) (while acknowledging its achievements) clearly suggests that you believe that the Left's fortunes can only be resuscitated by the CPI(M) even with its humongous mistakes.
If all you say is so hunky-dory with the CPI(M), why is it in a state of decline for years now? Why is its representatives and leaders such as Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee unwilling to change their spots and insisting upon disastrous courses (SEZs, industrialisation with more land acquisition, etc) despite being shown their places time and again by the people? What form of Left unity do you think is possible if leaders like Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee continue to rule the roost in the CPI(M)?
Howmuchsoever the CPI(M) tries to stay true to its programme and its left credentials in other states and smaller units, its repeated condoning of the actions of its strong unit leadership - such as Bengal's - will only drag it down further. And when those who are tired of trying to fight it from within, strive to build left unity and praxis from outside the CPI(M) without the baggage of the right wing deviation and anti-people nonsense perpetrated by the likes of Bhattacharjee and his clique, they are derided by people like you.
Do introspect and think about it. The Left in India is in crisis- partly and mainly of its own making. And the CPI(M) cannot absolve itself of blame. Nonsensically parroting what your leaders tell you as defense of the CPI(M)'s many mistakes and deviations will certainly not help. Constructive criticism is the order of the day as much as appreciation of any other work/struggle that is not necessarily led by the CPI(M). The CPI(M) does not have a monopoly over the lives and activism of those committed to work on the Left in the country. Try understanding that.
every body knows that cpim has been become a saviour of congress, industrialist are bailed out by congress and congress is bailed out by cpim(whenever congress required no in parliament cpim comes forward and help them out) we have already been seen cpim double standard in president fiasco. if cpim consider itself supporting pranab mukerjee for president. it was correct stand. he was the main architecture of nuclear deal and responsibe for neo liberal policies . so why they expelled mr chatterji. how cpim can expelling chatterji was correct step. there are some people in cpim they are the member of polit bureo and cc they are having close nexus with congress. i belong to uttar pradersh and i live here i sought that cpim ,citu member are killed by sp in up. and bihar by lalu. they r sitting with them. sharing dias, cpim. every one know mr sarkar was erstwhile mla of cpim from bihar he was killed by sahabuddin. next day mr harkishan surjit was canvassing with lalu how rediculos they r claiming we are communist. they think lalu and mulayam are most honest and liberal and secular . therefore there base have been shrunk to nill. in up and bihar. if cpim belongs to maxism and leninsm so what they are doing with these corrupt n communal parties.
Further to what I stated in my first part titled as , 'Who is dogmatist?', - let me answer your political points.
First ,you find fault with my reference to TamilNadu. Since your pamphlet accused that “ the Left Parties under the leadership of the CPI (M) is unable to provide this alternative. That is because they continue to rely on opportunistic forces like the SP, BSP and other regional parties, which do not share any alternative policy vision.”, I stoutly refuted your allegation to emphasis that the CPI(M) does not rely on regional parties like SP, BSP and other regional parties, even as they carry on their independent mass movement on various issues and TamilNadu was mentioned in that context, not for contenting myself with the CPIM replying to Karunanidhi .The CPI(M) is not interested in getting any certificate from any quarters, least of people like who are utterly incapable of understanding political events and activities in proper conext . The CPI(M) and its mass organizations have been mobilizing masses on various state level and local level issues against the anti-people policies of AIADMK Govt. be it against the workers, peasants, students, women, youth etc.. . It is not necessary here to list them.The CPI(M) is the only Left party which has organized maximum struggles against the policies of the state and central govt regimes independently ,apart from joint stuggles with other left parties. . . If you still insist, I am prepared to list them.
By the way, since when making reference to how the CPI(M) has been conducting independent mass movement in Tamilnadu and taking on DMK for its role on anti-people policies of the UPA-II Govt is considered as “boasting”? If you can “boast” of your activities in JNU/Delhi, why cant I “boast” of CPI(M)’s political activities? . Your question as to why the CPI(M) failed to make advances in Tamilnadu and your ‘ridicule’ of its electoral alliances with state parties is typical of what the petty-bourgeoise sections and anti-Left media have been making from time to time just with the objective of belittling the Left, The CPI(M) joined hands with the DMK or AIADMK ,only if it was consistent with its all India political line at the prevailing times based on national issues .not to secure any MLA/MP. . As long as you were with the CPI(M), was it an issue for you and your cohorts any time? Well. if you are so averse to having allies in political fight, how come you have joined hands with paper organizations like Left Co-ordination Committee in Kerala, Marxist Peravai in TamilNadu, Mangat Ram Palsa’s Punjab CPM, etc in search for allies for your own Left Collective? Can you give any guarantee that your so-called Left Alliance would make advances at least in states where these outfits are from so that your outfits can “mean something for the working people”? Dont be so pathetic in your political understanding in few months of time of having been expelled from the CPI(M).
It is ridiculous on your part to say that the CPI(M) stood with the state govt in Koodankulam issue. The stand of the CPI(M) is independent of what Jayalalitha stood for. For your information, it is again a canard that the party was against the protesting people. The CPI(M) has always been against the state govts repressive action against the people, You are trying to distort the CPIM’s stand .
Your pamphlet mentioned of the Left having “failed to provide political alternative because it relies on parties like SP,BSP and other regional parties”. I have answered you by stressing on CPI(M)’s independent and joint activities. What else was my comment then in my very first post?
The CPI(M has organized various movement against the FDI in retail independently in states . The very fact that the UDF Govt led by the Congress in Kerala is not going to allow entry of Retailers like Walmart speaks volumes about the impact of the Left on state’s ruling alliance. So also in west Bengal where Mamata has been forced to take stand against FDI in retail because of Left’s strength in west Bengal .
The CPI(M) and other Left parties have integrated signature movement for food security with opposition to FDI in retail. In Chennai, Prakash Karat of the CPI(M) and D Raja of the CPI participated in rally to inaugurate the signature drive movement in which the state president of the Traders Association was also present.. The CPIM in Tamilnadu organized s been conducting numerous street corner meetings and demonstrations against the FDI in retail, in Madurai, the CPI organized a protest meeting addressed by Brinda Karat in which chamber of commerce office bearers also participated. So also in industrial town of Tiruppur where Sitaram Yechury addressed meeting in which Traders bodies too took part. Various state leaders took part in rallies in key centres in Tamilnadu. In various states too, the CPIM and other Left parties have been rallying the masses against the FDI in retail. What about the Feb all india strike by the central trade unions , the demands include opposition to the FDI in retail, the key role being played by the Left TUs.?
You are repeatedly talking about Mulayams betrayal like a cliché, as if Mulayam singh’s party is under the control of the CPIM , as rightly pointed out by Com Samsher Singh in his post which has been removed subsequently. If tomorrow, one of the outfits that participated the Left Collective meeting on jan 13th deserts you, will you stop your activities as a whole? The CPI was with the Congress from 1970 till their Batinda Party Congress in 1978/79,It supported Emergency. It called the JP movement as fascist . It disrupted the Left in Bengal and Kerala. It was party to the semi-fascist reign of terror let loose by the Congress in West Bengal in 1972-77. In spite of all these, when it came back to the Left fold, it has been accepted as part of the Left Front, not shunned? Why don’t you have basic understanding that bourgeoise parties are not consistent on peoples issues. Yet, you have to go for joint movements ,because they need to be broad-based as much as possible .wherever its necessary. This is the essence of unity and struggle . Well, one can wake up those who really sleep. but not those who pretend sleeping!!!
As for your reference to Buddhadeb on SEZ, please quote him exactly ,Then I will respond to you. I cant respond to your generalized comment about him.
Well, the CPI(M) is not averse to criticism. But they should be based on facts, not like the ones to say that it “relies on regional parties”, completely ignoring its independent mass movement. This is not to say that as a party ,it never committed any mistakes. A child that walks will fall few times, in the process, it learns further. In the same way, the CPIM is capable of learning from mistakes and taking the Left movement further. But what is political bankruptcy is to attempt to float so-called New Left to oppose the CPIM, by joining hands with outfits that are only in paper ,not any organizations worth its name, to use Dr Ashok Mitra’s words. . Your so-called ‘ New Left’ is bound to flop like Saiffuddin Choudhury’s PDS in west Bengal, like various ultra Left outfits who became appendage of the ruling class at various times.
As for your gleeful remarks about CPIM’s prospects in West Bengal, I can only recall those who predicted doomsday for the CPIM in Bengal after its “defeat” in 1972 elections , as the CPIM was considered to be in “political wilderness” from 1972 to 1977. Yet when the opportunity came, the people reposed their confidence in CPIM and other Left parties , because the CPIM never lost contact with the masses at ground level, despite reign of terror during the period.
The CPIM is the leading and most organised Left and the Left Front led by it stands in forefront in providing political alternative to the ruling class by mobilizing the masses on various issues , though it knows the struggle is a complex and protarcted one. there is no short cut to this. Any other so-called Left outfit that stands aloof from the Left Front will only play into the hands of the ruling classes,wittingly or unwittingly.
Mr Roshan Kishore, When I posted my comments to the article posted by srinir, I mentioned that the article exhibited petty bourgeoise attitude, ignoring the complex ground realities in vast country like India, the term ‘ petty bourgeoise’ used in political sense. Now I understand the at personal level also, you are suffering from petty bourgeoise childishness. Otherwise, you would not have said that I was “ indulging in name-calling and showing 'envy' at the media coverage received by the "lionized splinter groups".
If warning about the real intention of the media and its hostility towards the CPI(M) which is the sole motive for it to give coverage to splinters groups like yours is to be construed as being “jealous and envious “ by people like you, then it only confirms your lack of Marxist understanding of the corporate media and how petty-minded that you're.
Well, since you have great admiration for Com Ashok Mitra for whom every Left leaning person has great respect , let me
reproduce some extracts from an article he penned in ‘The Telegraph’ (dated 23/5/2001 , reproduced in People’s Democracy dated June 3,2001) titled as “Looking Back in Triumph “ , after the West Bengal Assembly elections which returned the Left Front for the 6th time in a row. Here is how Dr Mitra hit out at the media in his own sarcastic style , while talking about its role in whipping up anti-CPI(M) propaganda and in propping up all those who were ranged against the CPI(M), including those who were expelled from the CPI(M) then:
“ None of the media bothered to find out whether voters in West Bengal, in town and country, could have a mind of their own and might have benefited in some measure or other on account of the activities of the Left Front regime in the course of the past two and a half decades. They regarded the electorate in West Bengal as dummies who would vote as the media would direct them to.
As divertissement, the media also built up into a major political entity the hotchpotch of a handful of stray characters who had recently deserted the Communist Party of India (Marxist) and formed a paper organization, the Party for Democratic Socialism. The PDS was provided with huge space in the print as well as the electronic media. The phantom leaders of this so-called party emerged overnight as all-India figures, courtesy the media. The electorate was assured that, apart from the deliverer lady, the PDS too would contribute substantially towards the driving of the final nail in the Left Front’s coffin. (Almost all the candidates put up by this outfit were found to have lost their security deposits when the poll results were out.)”. The Telegraph dated 23/5/2001
Obviously, Dr Mitra was referring to the Party for Democratic Socialism (PDS) floated by Mr Saiffuddin Chowdhury , a CPI(M) MP and CC Member that he was , expelled from the CPI(M) in 2000 ,if I am not wrong.
Well, the point here is: you’re accusing me as “envy or being jealous” for mentioning about the real motive of the media giving space and coverage for the present splinter outfits like yours. But, Poor Saiffudin Chowhury, he did not have an adviser like Mr Roshan Kishore to accuse Dr Ashok Mitra being “envious and jealous” of the media space PDS was getting from the media,both national as well as Calcutta media !!!!!
Instead of analyzing the real motive and the role of the corporate media in promoting anti-Left propaganda from Marxist outlook, you are resorting to petty-minded childish argument. Better you grow up to counter me politically instead of name calling as “envious and jealous” .
Well, in the present context , only players are different, with PDS replaced by splinter groups expelled from the CPI(M) for various reasons, who gathered in Delhi on Jan 13th to give a call for ' New Left' which is totally unwarranted . But the media which is gleeful like it was with PDS in Calcutta then , continues to do the same job of belittling the CPI(M) whenever they get chance to do so , as was precisely analyzed by Dr Mitra in 2001.
Be that as it may. Next, you are accusing me as “arrogant dogmatist and flatter” of the CPI(M) as though I was indulging in personality cult of the CPI(M) leaders. Arrogant is one who calls others as arrogant. My whole reply was political in nature . A dogmatist is one who sees things with blinkered eyes and always inflexible , not taking ground realities in their entirety into account. The living essence of Marxism is about concrete analysis of the concrete conditions which are nothing but realities.
While the CPI(M) and other Left parties carry on their independent mass movements on various issues, they have flexible approach as well to join hands with regional parties om issue basis ,accoding to the political situation ,whenever there is scope for joint movement .That is how Political alternative has to be built and brought about ,especially when the Left as a whole is weak in many states .The success or failure of this depends on co-relation of political forces and class consciousness. You dont want the Left to be flexible , Yet you call yourself as pragmatist .I stand for flexibility, but I stand accused by you as ‘dogmatist’ ? Strange indeed!!!!!!!
RMaran
P S:My next part will deal with your slander on CPIM and certain other issues you have raised.
you may be content with karunanidhi replying to your criticisms in the DMK party mouthpiece. but that is hardly a certificate for your party taking any independent and credible left initiative. what about the aiadmk and cpim's role vis-a-vis the jayalalitha led state government? one never hears any initiative on the part of the cpim against the jayalalitha regime..why so? why did the cpim stand with the state government and against the protesting people on the kudankulam nuclear power plant issue?
the problem with arrogant dogmatists like you is that whoever does not agree with the cpim or makes any criticism of it has to be branded as "hostile to the cpim". there is no attempt to look within and introspect. that is why, you are boasting about the cpim even in a state like tamil nadu where it has failed to make any advance even after so many decades of existence. tailing the dmk in one election and aiadmk in another can hardly ensure any advance for the left. it can of course secure a few mp/mla seats but that hardly means anything for the working people in tamil nadu today.
your political bankruptcy is further exposed by the fact that while you are indulging in name-calling and showing envy at the media coverage received by the "lionized splinter groups", you fail to address the criticisms of the cpim made in the SFI-JNU/DSF pamphlet. (i) do you deny the fact that the cpim leadership jointly protested with mulayam singh against FDI in retail? where was cpim's or left's independent mobilisation on that issue? why trust mulayam singh even after the nuclear deal fisco? (ii) do you deny that buddhadeb bhattacharjee has been arguing for granting SEZ status to Wipro and Infosys in west bengal? do you support his position?
please answer these questions before embarking on your rants. these are not blind criticisms. these are concrete criticisms, which many within the cpim itself - who are not arrogant dogmatists and flatterers of the party leadership like you - will agree with. it is because of such erroneous politics that the cpim, that was once the pride of the indian left, has fallen into such disrepute. see the evidence in the steady erosion of its mass base, even in its strongholds like west bengal and kerala. do you know what is going to happen in the forthcoming panchayat elections in west bengal?
it is in this context that the emergence of a "new left" has become objectively necessary and subjectively possible. you do not seem to have the capacity to critique this "new left" on the basis of its agenda or its praxis. therefore you resort to the same hackneyed charges of being "hostile" to the cpim, as if it is a moral sin. cpim will get what it deserves. if its politics is increasingly becoming anti-people it will be criticized for that. either correct your own mistakes or be prepared to face criticisms. no point whining about it.
"The scale of its victory could induce the Left Front into a kind of euphoria. It is however relevant to draw attention to a number of emerging facts:
(a) While the Front has registered a major triumph in this year’s poll, it is not an unprecedented achievement. For example,
in 1987 the Front captured 251 of the 294 seats in the assembly; this time, the tally has been only 235. And there have been
other occasions too in the past when the Front obtained more than 50 per cent of the total votes cast.
(b) A large proportion of the Front government’s efforts and resources has over the past five years been expended
to improve the infrastructure in and around Kolkata, including for the establishment of luxury facilities which could seduce the upper-class mind, especially industry circles. This apparently pro-rich and pro-big industry bias in the state government’s policies has borne little fruit though in electoral terms. The Front actually has won in 2006 a lesser number of seats in Kolkata than it did in the past. The areas where civic improvements such as flyovers, sleek modern roads, shopping plazas and suchlike are concentrated continue to vote with a vengeance against the Left Front. The Front therefore faces a dilemma: to increase further the outlay on luxury facilities might fail to yield electoral dividends, while the relative curtailment of outlay intended for the poor could lead to a rapid erosion of its “safe” vote bank.
(c) The issue of conversion, at state initiative, of arable land for commercial exploitation, the poll results suggest, should
be handled with some circumspection. In the rural belt of South 24 Parganas, the Left Front lost in just a single constituency,
Bhangar, partly because of the involvement of this location in the controversy. Similarly, while the Front made a clean
sweep of the rest of the seats in the district of Howrah, it failed to win in two constituencies where the issue of land sales had
cropped up.
(d) The state government has apparently made up its mind to pursue a vigorous programme of generally capital-intensive
industrial growth with focus on the IT industry. It has, simultaneously, made explicit its determination to make the
state more investor-friendly. The state administration, it follows, would from now on allocate a relatively higher
proportion of its resources in the pursuit of these goals. What impact such a policy is likely to have on the life and
living of close to seven million unemployed in the state remains an open question. The surprise defeat of the state labour minister, along with the loss of a number of seats on the fringes of Kolkata, should provide some sort of a warning. It is possible to trace an undercurrent of resentment at the resulting bias – howsoever unintentional – for labour economising industrialisation; there is similar disquiet over hasty handing over of lush agricultural land either for “contract farming” or to fly-by-night adventurers from other shores.
(e) Above all, the mandate the Left Front has won, in the view of a vast number of its rank and file, is a mandate for Left
principles. Any deviation from these principles, such as a diminution of the role of the public sector in the development
agenda, could meet with fierce internal resistance. The seventh Left Front government therefore must continuously watch
its steps."
AM, "Suffrage in West Bengal", EPW, May 27, 2006
Dear Mr. Pranav,
You have indeed raised quite a few important points. I would like to say a few things:
1) You have rightly said that electoral results should not to be interpreted in a flat manner to understand politics, otherwise the analysis will be fraught with many mistakes. And I think you have committed the mistake which you were wary of. Was the 2006 WB result a mandate for an industrialization led by forceful acquisition of fertile land, was it a mandate to fire upon unwilling farmers, or was it a mandate to bring more and more of such industries of neo-liberal model? The question is not pro-industry or anti-industry, but industry of what nature; because anybody, even an idiot according to Ashok Mitra, can understand the importance of industries. If 2006 was a verdict for industries, it was for a model that is definitely not of neoliberal order. Was it too much of expectation from the people, that is if it was indeed so, to a government led by Left parties who are avowed to fight against neoliberalism? Hence I think the argument made in the article holds fine, and that is what Manik Sarkar intended to say: we have not done anything which people did not expect us to do. So one needs to read electoral results carefully, yes, but not stop reading it. In that way, reading electoral verdicts wont create the contradiction which you seem to suggest.
2) I am generally averse to seeing commitment and progressiveness only abstractly. Those are not good enough if that does not lead to betterment of peoples' lives. And I do not think that the LF in WB has been in the government by merely speaking about abstract commitment and progressiveness. Those have been transformed into tangible outcomes in peoples' lives for the better. For example, Left's 'abstract' stand on secularism has reflected in drastic reduction of communal violence/riots in the states; or food security; or issue of land etc. Those are better than perhaps any state in the country. The point is, no political analysis can be sans analyzing concrete outcomes that change peoples' lives.
And there are failures. And there are other states ruled by other political outfits that out-shines WB on certain indicators that indicate living conditions of the masses. Should we not be concerned by that? Those are the aspects on which LF could and should have emphasized, like a state ruled by the same political formation (Tripura), rather than trying to implement the neoliberal logic.
3) And then, of course, there are deviations, which you mentioned. Did those deviations bring larger electoral fortunes? Well I tend to believe even electorally we would have been better of without those. Otherwise, why do we believe in democratic mandate of the people? And that is precisely why, as you rightly said, left should ponder upon "such uncomfortable questions". Can't agree with you more on that. But I do not think anybody has tried to reduce that story of ideological deviation as merely 'post 2001' or so. What is hammered upon here, I think, is to underline the contrast which wins peoples mandate. And that is evident even in an analysis of 'restricted' scope. That is of course valuable.
The observations made by Mr. Prasenjit Bose are correct in more than one way. There is much to read from the results of the bye elections other than any cause for jubilation on the part of the Left establishment of Bengal. Like, the results show, the Left has won one seat of Nalhati, but the size of their vote has further declined. Interestingly if anyone follows the results of 2011 Vidhansabha elections, the best Left performance was recorded in Rejinagar. At Rejinagar the current results show even a sharp and further drop in the votes for the left. Across the three constituencies the drop in the net vote for the left is significant. In the regional media the left representatives tried to appear brave by arguing that the results should be regarded as the symbol of people's disenchantment with the AITC government as the anti government vote is more. This logic is like building castles in the air. because by the same logic the anti left vote has nearly doubled in comparison to 2011. There are many causes at play. Taking cue from Mr. Bose's argument I would like to reiterate that the trend clearly shows the fall out of the Bengal left's apathy (which was set in from arond mid eighties) towards building social progressive movements. Also a fact that Bengal's electoral terrain is changing pretty fast. The trend can be explained elsewhere, but for this comment I would rest by saying that the politics of Bengal is not limited with the scope of CPI(M), AITC or INC. It is changing. The factors are visbly and invisbly displayed along the election outcomes post 2011. Left establishment should think deep as another fact which no one has emphasized about the current bye election results is that each constituency i.e. Nalhati, Rejinagar and Englishbazar has seen at an average 6% increase from 2011 in terms of voters participation. The Left establishment should face up to this complex terrain. I conclude by reiterating that politics of Bengal is not remaining within the scope of AITC and CPI(M). It is happening to be more.
Mr. Bose
Thanks for your informative and well-argued piece on the election results in Tripura. I believe it will contribute to a healthy and wide-ranging debate on the Indian left - it's past, present and future. Allow me to point out, however, that while I appreciated the piece, it left me with a certain sense of disappointment. While I am no cpim loyalist, i could not help but discern a certain unwarranted simplification in your analysis. Kindly permit me to identify the nature of this simplification.
While it is certainly the case that success and failure in electoral politics is very important to the fortunes of a political movement in a country like India, and that the left has to make sincere efforts to present itself as an electorally viable alternative, reducing political analysis to a purely psephological exercise is a path fraught with perils and contradictions. And I believe your article suffers to some extent from this problem. For instance, you draw a connection, which is central to your analysis, between the declining electoral fortunes, be it seats or vote share, of the left front in Bengal, and a certain rightward shift in cpim embodied most strikingly, according to you, in its pro-industrialisation drive. This to me seems an oversimplification. Such an analysis cannot account at all for extremely significant events like the landslide victory of the left front in the 2006 state elections. Remember the left front contested the 2006 elections almost solely on the plank of industrialisation. Before the elections the cpim had gone on an extensive and aggressive campaign projecting 'brand Buddha' as the way forward for the state. Now, if electoral performance were the sole criterion for judging the correctness and mass acceptance of an ideological-political line, the 2006 results could have been read as an overwhelming mandate for industrialisation. And maybe the cpim did read it in such a manner. The point, however, is that by continuing to operate in such a frame of analysis, we will be imposing an unnecessary constraint on our vision - thereby scuttling the prospects of a serious and productive debate.
Secondly, as a sympathiser of left politics, I have some problems with the kind of abstraction with which socio-economic indicators are being looked at. Now, to be sure, in the long run the ideological commitment of a political force would have a bearing on the welfare of the people. The whole left project is about such a transformation. But does that warrant seeing a mechanical one-on-one correspondence between commitment and socio-economic indicators? I would not think so. Remember that even apart from tripura, there are several states - for instance states like Tamil nadu, Maharashtra, uttarakhand, Himachal Pradesh, Goa etc. - which fare much better than West Bengal on a range of socio-economic indicators. On several such indicators, these states fare even better than Kerala and Tripura. None of these states, of course, has ever had a left government. Now, if socio-economic indicators were the sole criterion for judgment, forces like the DMK would seem far more progressive than the cpim. If the socio-economic statistics in Tripura prove something, what do the statistics in these other states prove? The problem is that we on the left have systematically shied away from even asking ourselves these questions. And the same reluctance seems to lurk in your article.
Finally, such reluctant analysis takes us farther away from historically concrete political analysis. It is quite strange that most of your comparative statistics begin from 2001. Why is that? The statistics for instance tell us that on these socio-economic indicators west Bengal did not fare particularly well even before 2001. And, of course, by 2001, the left front government had already finished around 25 years - enough time to carry out thoroughgoing work on health, education, sanitation etc. Let me remind you that even by 2001, Kerala, where the left had enjoyed a much shorter duration in power, had enormously outpaced west Bengal as far as socio-economic indicators were concerned. To me this this suggests that problems in west Bengal go far deeper than just the pro-industrialisation stance of leaders post-2001. Several political commentators have observed, for instance, that a certain undesirable electorally motivated reformism had crept into the agrarian agenda of the cpim in the eighties itself. There was a distinct shift in the policy of the cpim, in the eighties, from isolating the dominant agrarian classes to winning them over. This led to tremendous electoral gains, of course, but it diluted the agenda of agrarian change, and led to a widespread ideological-political slackening within the cpim. Could such ideological debilitation have been responsible for the abandonment of certain crucial tasks of social welfare even in the eighties and nineties, a time when the left front used to win comfortably? Could this class reformism have had something to do with the left's far from robust performance on the questions of the emancipation of Dalits, tribals, minority communities etc. even in the first two decades of its rule?
I believe that the left has to urgently raise and answer such uncomfortable questions. Easy and neat dichotomies between pre-2001 and post-2001, between Tripura and Bengal, between buddadeb and jyoti Basu, while they may seem explanatorily tempting and attractive, are not really of much value.
Regards
Pranav
"it could win more seats. i want to ask - what matters more to you - winning more seats or retaining a better vote percentage? your recipe for the left is not based in the realities of Indian politics but in an esoteric approach which would render the left politically irrelevant in parliamentary politics."
People like you only expose how sections of the CPI(M) have slipped into the worst kind of Parliamentary deviations. When one hopes for a political revival of the CPIM people like you come in and shatter all hopes. Considering Rahul Gandhi's and Sitaram's frequent meetings are according to you a sign of the revival of the left, I really wish you'd revise your understanding of a left movement.
I really don't know what you mean. While, unlike the CPI(M), I am not really against the creation of smaller states but to assume that smaller states bring in better governance is not always entirely true. Look at the kind of war against the people that has been unleashed by the state in the newly created smaller states like Jharkhand and Chattisgarh. The very tribal populations that were supposed to be benefiting from the creation of these states have been the most deprived after the formation of these states. Also look at Uttrakhand. It was created with the intention of the hill people not losing out on development to the people in the plains in U.P. After Uttarakhand's creation even now the bulk of industrialisation and job creation has happened in places like Haridwar etc.- Among the few plains areas of Uttarakhand.
About better governance in smaller states- Is that really true? Look at Goa? There's been a continuous, almost tragi-comedy kind of musical chairs that we've seen with the CM's of the state. Look at how the mining lobby of Goa is ruling the state today and the good governance of Goa only exists for the tourists.
In the context of reverses in West Bengal, the 20th Party Congress of the CPI(M) resolved the following in its Political Resolution: '...the strengthening of the CPI(M) and the recovering of the ground lost by the Left assume importance....Learning from experience, we should overcome the weaknesses at the political and organisational level and reestablish our links with the people who have got alienated.'
However, like many other aspects of the Political Resolution, it appears that the task of reestablishing links with the alienated people has also taken a backseat. The recent bye-elections show that the mass base of the Left is eroding further. This erosion cannot be the basis of any recovery. The suggestion that people's support can be ignored and the Left can still win through opportunistic parliamentary manipulations exemplifies what is wrong with the CPI(M) today. The realities of parliamentary democracy are predicated upon support among the people. With declining people's support, no Party can have a future, leave alone a Left party.
The sooner the CPI(M) prioritizes winning back its declining support in west bengal, the better. Ignoring or being in denial of this basic fact will not help. Correct lessons need to be drawn from the recent election results. Correct lessons needed to be drawn from all previous election results as well. This article provides some serious food for thought to all those who are genuinely concerned about the future of the Left. Prasenjit should continue to write such excellent articles and give voice to opinions within the ranks of the Party that are often steamrolled and ignored by the cynics.
dear well wisher,
you seem to have misread the argument regarding social indicators made in the article. consider the fact that in 2001 the literacy rate in Tripura was 73% while in West Bengal it was 68%. in 2011 the literacy rate in Tripura improved to 87% while in West Bengal it was 77%. therefore while the proportion of literate people in Tripura and West Bengal was at a similar level in 2001, by 2011 a much higher proportion of people were literate than in West Bengal. Similarly, the proportion of households with electricity in 2001 was 41% in Tripura and 37% in West Bengal - comparable levels. by 2011, the proportion improved to 68% in Tripura but only 54% in West Bengal. If relative population sizes matter so much for these indicators, what explains the similarity of literacy rates or access to electricity in Tripura and West Bengal in 2001? the difference in population sizes was there in 2001 too. the fact is that the quality of life was better for a much higher proportion of population of Tripura in 2011 than that of West Bengal, while it was roughly similar in 2001.
the comparison between West Bengal and Tripura becomes relevant because both were governed by the same political coalition - the LF. the rapid improvement in development indicators in Tripura compared to West Bengal between 2001 and 2011 must have something to do with policy priorities of the two governments. what has population size got to do with the fact that Tripura was the Nos. 1 state in India in implementing MNREGA while West Bengal was a laggard? it is an issue of political will.
please do not try to obfuscate ideological-political factors by hiding behind inane arguments like "small states have a better quality of administration". if the size of a state is the sole determinant of the quality of administration and improved social indicators, then the policy conclusion should be to divide the existing states into states of the size of Tripura in the interest of the people - i.e. to make a state out of every district in India! fortunately, that is not the case, which can be seen from the experiences of many of the smaller states, be it Sikkim or Jharkhand. moreover, administrative convenience has never been the sole basis of state formation; there are historical, political, cultural factors.
"even if the left vote witnesses a further decline, the fact that the TMC and the Congress contested separately, made it possible for the Left to win one seat. in our parliamentary politics, winning is all that matters, not the percentage of votes received."
response: winning seats matter the most. but the fact is that you are bound to lose seats if your vote share declines. when the LF got around 50% vote in west bengal it could win over 200 seats. when LF's voteshare fell to 41% in 2011, its seats also fell to 60. If the voteshare declines further, it will naturally imply even lesser seats. Moreover, the strength of a political party in a state cannot be judged solely on the basis of seats. Congress won 42 seats in 2011 elections compared to 40 won by the CPI(M). Do you think that therefore Congress became a bigger political party in West Bengal compared to the CPI(M)?
"as reported in the press, rahul gandhi has been frequenting com. Sitaram Yechury's chamber regularly in recent times. if the left manages to keep the TMC and the Congress from striking an understanding with the Congress in west bengal, wouldn't this be the best strategy to remain relevant for the Left? it could win more seats."
response: if reports regarding rahul gandhi "frequenting" the CPIM leader is correct, it is indeed surprising, because that CPIM leader is currently leading a "Sangharsh Sandesh" jatha against the policies of the Congress-led government from Mumbai! People will see through such hypocrisy and punish rather than reward the CPIM for this. besides, your understanding that the left can "manage" to keep the TMC and Congress away from each other is fallacious. that is not the way political alliances operate. TMC and Congress will come together or contest separately in keeping with their own political interests at the state or the national level. There is precious little the Left can do about it. The Left will only expose its weakness if it asserts that the only way it can win more seats is by preventing an alliance between TMC and Congress. Rather than winning more seats, the Left will continue to suffer erosion.
"i want to ask - what matters more to you - winning more seats or retaining a better vote percentage? your recipe for the left is not based in the realities of Indian politics but in an esoteric approach which would render the left politically irrelevant in parliamentary politics."
response: what matters for the Left is to reverse the declining trend in its popular support. if the support and voteshare of the Left starts increasing again, it will naturally lead to more seats for the Left. what is indeed esoteric - at least for the people of west bengal - is the continuing humbug by a section of the Left of its imminent resurgence, by dividing the TMC and the Congress. that is why popular support for the Left continues to decline and which, if not reversed soon, will surely make it politically irrelevant. how much the likes of you understand "the realities of Indian politics" is there for all to see: you seem to have no concern for the fact that the erosion of support for the Left in West Bengal continues unabated.
thank you for shedding some light on the brilliant electoral victory in Tripura. Long Live the efforts of our comrades there.
Jharkhand is also a small state, Mr. well wisher
Dear Mr. Bose,
I am most surprised at the logic of your arguement. The creation of small states in our country has decisively shown over time that irrespective of the ideology or politics of the party in power, they have a better quality of administration and deliver better results to the people. The better social indicators of Tripura are based in the simple FACT that Tripura is a small state while West Bengal is a large one. Kindly stop insinuating ideological-political reasons for the same.
a well wisher.
even if the left vote witnesses a further decline, the fact that the TMC and the Congress contested separately, made it possible for the Left to win one seat. in our parliamentary politics, winning is all that matters, not the percentage of votes received. as reported in the press, rahul gandhi has been frequenting com. Sitaram Yechury's chamber regularly in recent times. if the left manages to keep the TMC and the Congress from striking an understanding with the Congress in west bengal, wouldn't this be the best strategy to remain relevant for the Left? it could win more seats. i want to ask - what matters more to you - winning more seats or retaining a better vote percentage? your recipe for the left is not based in the realities of Indian politics but in an esoteric approach which would render the left politically irrelevant in parliamentary politics.
Two times he became CM of kerala, but he could not finish tenure. But he led communist movement all over India very successfully. Even today communist party did not get this kind of intelligent man. He has good knowledge about marxism. But indian condition is very different, he identified that also. He was not good speaker, but his brain played important role. He has good language skill, especially he can talk, Malayalam, Sanskrit, Tamil, Hindi and English. When party will get this kind of genius.
Workers joined work en masse on the 21st once the transport sector has been kept under the purview of the strike. A few Ranadive-ites think that their echo-chambers reflect in an authentic manner the views of the workers. Workers understand more than anybody that these strikes are not going to help them and hence they defied the strike. Working Class struggles in the 21st century are not about calling bandhs and forcing a shutdown - thats the cardinal mistake Ranadive-ites are making.
All the left and progressive force of the country must condemn the hanging of Afzal Guru by the Government of India. This act was a political, and not a legal act. Behind it lay a desperate need to drum up nationalist hype, as the popularity of the Congress led UPA government steadily disappears, as working class anger leads to repeated strikes and even general strikes, called even by bureaucratic union leaders, as middle class anger sometimes goes in the direction of the BJP and at other times in seemingly non-party, but definitely anti-Congress directions. Just like the hanging of Kasab, or the decision to introduce death penalty in rape and murder cases, this is a political act. It is significant that the government condones rape in uniform, with Chidambaram saying that in view of the army not coming to a consensus, the AFSPA rape cases cannot be covered. In the same way, Guru, who was, even by the extremely flawed legal process he faced, found guilty only of being involved in a alleged conspiracy, was nonetheless condemned to be hanged, while Babu Bajrangi and Maya Kodnani, found guilty of directly inciting riots, have not been condemned to be hanged. We do not call for their hanging either. But we point out that this is very clearly a case where Muslims will be punished more severely than Hindus, for not only same crimes but even lesser crimes. Even by existing law, death penalty can only be given in rarest of rare cases. But Guru was not one who fired a shot or threw a bomb. He was not present at the scene. Even by prosecution evidence his role was peripheral. The court ruled that he did not belong to a terrorist organisation. In addition, it must be remembered that Guru was not represented at the trial court by a lawyer. He was tortured into producing a confession which stank so much that even India’s higher courts impugned it. And yet he was sentenced to death. And this was ordered by the Supreme Court, in a terrible language, when it said that he must be hanged for the "collective conscience of society"
Guru was also denied the full legal and procedural rights one is supposed to get. If a clemency petition is rejected, and if the person is properly informed, there are opportunities for judicial review. Guru was denied this opportunity.His family members were not informed about the hanging and his body was not handed over to them.
We should also condemn the day long violence on those who raised their voices in protest, such as the arrest of S.A.R. Geelani, or the violence on Gautam Navlakha, and the house arrests in Kashmir.
We must demand
· End secretive hangings
· Hand over Afzal Guru’s body to his relatives
· Immediately release everyone arrested in connection with protests over the hangings
· Take action to punish those who attacked and those policemen who were complicit in the attacks, at Jantar Mantar
All democratic Indians must be urged to join a campaign to abolish the death penalty, in view of the extremely selective, flawed and politically motivated manner in which death penalty is carried out, even apart from any principled opposition to it that many have.
Class Struggle versus Serving the Rulers and Becoming Regional Linguistic Chauvinist: The Retreat of CITU in the coming General Strike
The media has praised the wisdom of the CPI(M) and the CITU. The taming of the Bengal CPI(M) takes one more step forward. Taken in conjunction with the interview of the former Chief Minister of West Bengal, Buddhadev Bhattacharjee, to ABP Ananda, it marks an important stage in the transition of the CPI(M). From a Stalinist party, it had long been converted into a party with Stalinist organisational structures but wedded to social liberalism. However, it had so far been compelled to accept the pressure from its working class electoral base to a larger extent than the so-called modernisers wanted. In course of the long period of being a government party, however, certain changes had occurred, and now they have caught up. On one hand, the CPI(M) in government had protected strikes and bandhs when called by itself or its controlled mass organisations. As a result, the habit of really fighting militant battles, even militant economic battles, had given way to mock battles on the part of the CITU leaders. On the other hand, the party, serving the ruling class for years, even while extracting small prices, had been gradually transformed. This was becoming evident in the last years of the left front government. Buddhadev Bhattacharjee had already been stressing the need for greater labour discipline, the need for industry in the interests of the working people, and similar themes.
What, at this point a CPI(M) supporter will get up to say, are we to do then? Should we not have industries? What will happen to us? Where will we get jobs? How will we eat? Certainly, we need jobs. We need a living wage. Is that not what the general strike is all about? There is profit galore. Tax breaks make sure that capitalists do not lose out. The argument that we must first ensure that the capitalists make a profit and only then can we make a living wage, however, leads us to only one possible end. There is an international competition among capitalists. If “our” capitalists are to make profits at above the average rate of profit, then the solution lies in the use of superior technology which will mean an increase in relative surplus value, or in driving down our wages more and more. The Chinese “socialist” model upheld by Bhattacharjee and his friends is based on years of bureaucratic control that ensured that capitalist restoration went apace while trade union rights were ignored. If Chinese workers have received anything extra, that is because from 2010, there have been important working class struggles, not because of saviours from above.
The CPI(M)’s pressure and the CITU’s retreat tells us, first of all, that the CITU is a bureaucratic trade union more responsive to the CPI(M) than to the workers who are supposedly its members. Secondly, it shows that the relationship between CPI(M) and CITU, is not just bureaucratic, but that even over core labour issues, nowadays, the pressure of “greater’ interests prevail. One formal reason for cutting down the strike is particularly significant, for it shows the triumph of petty bourgeois “national” identity voer class. The strike will be restricted on 21 February because it is Bhasha Divas, says Bhattacharjee. Note, this means transport workers, wbho are parts of the working class, are being asked not to go on strike. To say that means, to argue that the Bengali national identity, remembered only as a reflex (given that it was in East Bengal/East Pakistan/Bangladesh that the battle over language was fought, while the reality of petty bourgeois Bengal is that apart from this one day, it is hardly concerned with Bengali), and given further that a large part of the working class is not Bengali speaking, in whose interest and why is the strike being restrained ?
It could be argued that the decision to call a general strike cum bandh was erroneous, that the working class struggle had not peaked where such a struggle becomes really viable. That would take us into other areas. The point is, these are not the reasons why the CPI(M) has pressurized the CITU. As long as the CITU commands the support of a considerable part of the working class, the CITU cannot be ignored. But when this allegiance of workers is used to betray them in the interests of the ruling class, and in the interests of electoral support from the Bengali speaking petty bourgeoisie, the intelligentsia who had turned to the TMC in 2009 and 2011, it is essential that militant workers become aware of the reality.
what is your position on SEZ to IT-companies in west bengal?
weather its benefitial to bengali prospective technical students and unemployed technical gradduates?
Dear Com. Maran,
I hope you know that Buddhadeb Bhattacharya and the CITU unit of West Bengal are not observing the strike on 21st Feb because of international language day.....the great leader Buddhadeb is openly advocating setting up of SEZs in West Bengal...not a word has come from his, in his (in)famous interview for 4 hours to two consecutive Bengali TV channels about the all-India jathas, the movement for food security, the killing of 85 comrades in WB....and our great leader Prakash Karat is conspicuously silent and people like you would defend this kind of complete subversion to bourgeois values, in the name of discipline....i only hope that you and others identify, before it is too late who are the Gorbachevs and Yeltsins of WB and India are!! unless u do so, the day is not far when Buddhadebs of the world will liquidate the party and you will continue to adhere to the disciplines of a non-existent communist party....
With revolutionary greetings,
Biplab Orao
Dear Maran,
Your vicious attack on any initiative that is constructively critical of the CPI(M) (while acknowledging its achievements) clearly suggests that you believe that the Left's fortunes can only be resuscitated by the CPI(M) even with its humongous mistakes.
If all you say is so hunky-dory with the CPI(M), why is it in a state of decline for years now? Why is its representatives and leaders such as Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee unwilling to change their spots and insisting upon disastrous courses (SEZs, industrialisation with more land acquisition, etc) despite being shown their places time and again by the people? What form of Left unity do you think is possible if leaders like Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee continue to rule the roost in the CPI(M)?
Howmuchsoever the CPI(M) tries to stay true to its programme and its left credentials in other states and smaller units, its repeated condoning of the actions of its strong unit leadership - such as Bengal's - will only drag it down further. And when those who are tired of trying to fight it from within, strive to build left unity and praxis from outside the CPI(M) without the baggage of the right wing deviation and anti-people nonsense perpetrated by the likes of Bhattacharjee and his clique, they are derided by people like you.
Do introspect and think about it. The Left in India is in crisis- partly and mainly of its own making. And the CPI(M) cannot absolve itself of blame. Nonsensically parroting what your leaders tell you as defense of the CPI(M)'s many mistakes and deviations will certainly not help. Constructive criticism is the order of the day as much as appreciation of any other work/struggle that is not necessarily led by the CPI(M). The CPI(M) does not have a monopoly over the lives and activism of those committed to work on the Left in the country. Try understanding that.
every body knows that cpim has been become a saviour of congress, industrialist are bailed out by congress and congress is bailed out by cpim(whenever congress required no in parliament cpim comes forward and help them out) we have already been seen cpim double standard in president fiasco. if cpim consider itself supporting pranab mukerjee for president. it was correct stand. he was the main architecture of nuclear deal and responsibe for neo liberal policies . so why they expelled mr chatterji. how cpim can expelling chatterji was correct step. there are some people in cpim they are the member of polit bureo and cc they are having close nexus with congress. i belong to uttar pradersh and i live here i sought that cpim ,citu member are killed by sp in up. and bihar by lalu. they r sitting with them. sharing dias, cpim. every one know mr sarkar was erstwhile mla of cpim from bihar he was killed by sahabuddin. next day mr harkishan surjit was canvassing with lalu how rediculos they r claiming we are communist. they think lalu and mulayam are most honest and liberal and secular . therefore there base have been shrunk to nill. in up and bihar. if cpim belongs to maxism and leninsm so what they are doing with these corrupt n communal parties.
Further to what I stated in my first part titled as , 'Who is dogmatist?', - let me answer your political points.
Mr Roshan Kishore, When I posted my comments to the article posted by srinir, I mentioned that the article exhibited petty bourgeoise attitude, ignoring the complex ground realities in vast country like India, the term ‘ petty bourgeoise’ used in political sense. Now I understand the at personal level also, you are suffering from petty bourgeoise childishness. Otherwise, you would not have said that I was “ indulging in name-calling and showing 'envy' at the media coverage received by the "lionized splinter groups".
If warning about the real intention of the media and its hostility towards the CPI(M) which is the sole motive for it to give coverage to splinters groups like yours is to be construed as being “jealous and envious “ by people like you, then it only confirms your lack of Marxist understanding of the corporate media and how petty-minded that you're.
Well, since you have great admiration for Com Ashok Mitra for whom every Left leaning person has great respect , let me
reproduce some extracts from an article he penned in ‘The Telegraph’ (dated 23/5/2001 , reproduced in People’s Democracy dated June 3,2001) titled as “Looking Back in Triumph “ , after the West Bengal Assembly elections which returned the Left Front for the 6th time in a row. Here is how Dr Mitra hit out at the media in his own sarcastic style , while talking about its role in whipping up anti-CPI(M) propaganda and in propping up all those who were ranged against the CPI(M), including those who were expelled from the CPI(M) then:
“ None of the media bothered to find out whether voters in West Bengal, in town and country, could have a mind of their own and might have benefited in some measure or other on account of the activities of the Left Front regime in the course of the past two and a half decades. They regarded the electorate in West Bengal as dummies who would vote as the media would direct them to.
As divertissement, the media also built up into a major political entity the hotchpotch of a handful of stray characters who had recently deserted the Communist Party of India (Marxist) and formed a paper organization, the Party for Democratic Socialism. The PDS was provided with huge space in the print as well as the electronic media. The phantom leaders of this so-called party emerged overnight as all-India figures, courtesy the media. The electorate was assured that, apart from the deliverer lady, the PDS too would contribute substantially towards the driving of the final nail in the Left Front’s coffin. (Almost all the candidates put up by this outfit were found to have lost their security deposits when the poll results were out.)”. The Telegraph dated 23/5/2001
Obviously, Dr Mitra was referring to the Party for Democratic Socialism (PDS) floated by Mr Saiffuddin Chowdhury , a CPI(M) MP and CC Member that he was , expelled from the CPI(M) in 2000 ,if I am not wrong.
Well, the point here is: you’re accusing me as “envy or being jealous” for mentioning about the real motive of the media giving space and coverage for the present splinter outfits like yours. But, Poor Saiffudin Chowhury, he did not have an adviser like Mr Roshan Kishore to accuse Dr Ashok Mitra being “envious and jealous” of the media space PDS was getting from the media,both national as well as Calcutta media !!!!!
Instead of analyzing the real motive and the role of the corporate media in promoting anti-Left propaganda from Marxist outlook, you are resorting to petty-minded childish argument. Better you grow up to counter me politically instead of name calling as “envious and jealous” .
Well, in the present context , only players are different, with PDS replaced by splinter groups expelled from the CPI(M) for various reasons, who gathered in Delhi on Jan 13th to give a call for ' New Left' which is totally unwarranted . But the media which is gleeful like it was with PDS in Calcutta then , continues to do the same job of belittling the CPI(M) whenever they get chance to do so , as was precisely analyzed by Dr Mitra in 2001.
Be that as it may. Next, you are accusing me as “arrogant dogmatist and flatter” of the CPI(M) as though I was indulging in personality cult of the CPI(M) leaders. Arrogant is one who calls others as arrogant. My whole reply was political in nature . A dogmatist is one who sees things with blinkered eyes and always inflexible , not taking ground realities in their entirety into account. The living essence of Marxism is about concrete analysis of the concrete conditions which are nothing but realities.
While the CPI(M) and other Left parties carry on their independent mass movements on various issues, they have flexible approach as well to join hands with regional parties om issue basis ,accoding to the political situation ,whenever there is scope for joint movement .That is how Political alternative has to be built and brought about ,especially when the Left as a whole is weak in many states .The success or failure of this depends on co-relation of political forces and class consciousness. You dont want the Left to be flexible , Yet you call yourself as pragmatist .I stand for flexibility, but I stand accused by you as ‘dogmatist’ ? Strange indeed!!!!!!!
RMaran
P S:My next part will deal with your slander on CPIM and certain other issues you have raised.
what do you have to say on the cpim support to pranab mukherjee and the dissolution of the SFI unit in JNU? do you support these steps?
Mr. Maran,
you may be content with karunanidhi replying to your criticisms in the DMK party mouthpiece. but that is hardly a certificate for your party taking any independent and credible left initiative. what about the aiadmk and cpim's role vis-a-vis the jayalalitha led state government? one never hears any initiative on the part of the cpim against the jayalalitha regime..why so? why did the cpim stand with the state government and against the protesting people on the kudankulam nuclear power plant issue?
the problem with arrogant dogmatists like you is that whoever does not agree with the cpim or makes any criticism of it has to be branded as "hostile to the cpim". there is no attempt to look within and introspect. that is why, you are boasting about the cpim even in a state like tamil nadu where it has failed to make any advance even after so many decades of existence. tailing the dmk in one election and aiadmk in another can hardly ensure any advance for the left. it can of course secure a few mp/mla seats but that hardly means anything for the working people in tamil nadu today.
your political bankruptcy is further exposed by the fact that while you are indulging in name-calling and showing envy at the media coverage received by the "lionized splinter groups", you fail to address the criticisms of the cpim made in the SFI-JNU/DSF pamphlet. (i) do you deny the fact that the cpim leadership jointly protested with mulayam singh against FDI in retail? where was cpim's or left's independent mobilisation on that issue? why trust mulayam singh even after the nuclear deal fisco? (ii) do you deny that buddhadeb bhattacharjee has been arguing for granting SEZ status to Wipro and Infosys in west bengal? do you support his position?
please answer these questions before embarking on your rants. these are not blind criticisms. these are concrete criticisms, which many within the cpim itself - who are not arrogant dogmatists and flatterers of the party leadership like you - will agree with. it is because of such erroneous politics that the cpim, that was once the pride of the indian left, has fallen into such disrepute. see the evidence in the steady erosion of its mass base, even in its strongholds like west bengal and kerala. do you know what is going to happen in the forthcoming panchayat elections in west bengal?
it is in this context that the emergence of a "new left" has become objectively necessary and subjectively possible. you do not seem to have the capacity to critique this "new left" on the basis of its agenda or its praxis. therefore you resort to the same hackneyed charges of being "hostile" to the cpim, as if it is a moral sin. cpim will get what it deserves. if its politics is increasingly becoming anti-people it will be criticized for that. either correct your own mistakes or be prepared to face criticisms. no point whining about it.
Roshan Kishore