COMMENTARY

Assembly Polls: Tables Turned on Congress

The crucial UP assembly elections are now in progress. Together with Punjab an Uttarakhand, UP results will provide a crucial index of the political mood in the country.

CPI(ML) Candidates for UP Assembly Elections

S. no. 
1         Krishna Adhikary Puranpur
2         Dinesh Kol          Rajgarh
3         Tilakdhari Bind    Mughalsarai
4         Ishwari Prasad    Jamania
5         Ramkrit Kol         Chakia (SC)
6         Shriram Chaudhary          Sikandarpur
7         Arjunlal   Hargaon (SC)
8         Ramdaras Chauhan         Nighasan
9         Yashwant Singh  Bhatpar Rani
10       Bihari Dharkar     Duddhi (SC)
11       Ramkrit Biyar      Chunar
12       Sunila Rawat       Biswan
13       Premlata Pandey Deoria Sadar
14       Hansraj Kol         Bara
15       Harish Chandra Jaiswal    Siswan
16       Rajesh Sahni      Maniram
17       Ramnawal Singh Ghosi
18       Jaiprakash Narayan         Azamgarh Sadar
19       Ramji Rajbhar     Dildarnagar
20       Rohitash Kumar Rajput    Moradabad Rural
21       Balmukund Dhuria           Akbarpur
22       Santosh Katheria Orai
23       Bhola Kol            Majhwan
24       Nanhulal Barkhera (SC)
25       Surendra Kumar  Paila (SC)
26       Kamrulhuda Kaish           Padrauna
27       Subedar Yadav    Mirzapur
28       Ramdular Kharwar           Robertsganj (SC)
29       Mahesh Singh     Karnalganj
30       Raghunath Prasad           Mahona
31       Jamal Ansari       Balia
32       Santosh Patel     Sataon
33       Vubhudesh Yadav            Bangarmau
34       Md. Abid Afjalgarh
35       Babulal Kol         Chhanbe (SC)
          
          

CPI(ML) Candidate for By-Election to RobertsganjParliamentary Constituency
                       
            Jitendra Kol       Robertsganj (SC)

Manmohan Singh has been quick to dismiss the idea that Congress’ defeat in Punjab and then in Uttarakhand is a referendum on his government. Some other political players having a stake in the central UPA government, too, have tried to minimise the importance of the mandate by terming it just as a vote against the Congress state governments. However if Sonia  Gandhi accepts that price-rise was one major factor in the defeat, then how can the central government and its policies evade responsibility? Moreover, were state governments (headed by Congress’ favourite CMs) not implementing the very policies of their central counterpart and working under the diktat of the High Command? Were these two elections also not fought in the name of Sonia Gandhi?

In the elections this time around, there complete reversal of roles for the Congress and BJP. The urban middle class and the masses  who had voted for Congress in the last election and ensured its rise to power, deserted Congress this time in favour of BJP and deserted it so completely that BJP captured 19 out of the 23 seats it contested in Punjab and this unprecedented rout of  Congress in the urban centres to the benefit of BJP, actually ensured the ascendance of the SAD-BJP combine to power
The mandate was a clear rejection of the development model pursued by Congress, as the urban centres were supposed to be the major beneficiaries of ‘fly-over- roads- malls-modernised airports’ brand development model. The indebted peasantry mired in the grave agrarian crisis and fighting against the threat of losing their lands to SEZs, most certainly rejected the Congress. It shows only the acuteness of the agrarian crises that even measures like a huge hike in the procurement prices of  wheat prices etc., too, did not cut much ice with the crisis-ridden peasantry. In Doab and Majha, Congress was completely wiped out and if it could maintain a respectable presence in the state, it was because of its good performance in the Malwa region, thanks to its deal with a religious sect called the Dera Sacha Baba, which issued a ‘fatwa’ to its large following in the region for supporting Congress. There are reports that the head of the Dera, facing criminal charges in connection with the murder of a journalist who had exposed the rape cases at the Dera HQs, was manipulated for the deal in return for a favour in the case. The decline of BSP, too, perhaps helped Congress in garnering Dalit votes in some pockets and thus maintain its over-all vote share. BSP, this time, could not get any seats in Punjab, which was once supposed to be its emerging bastion. CPI and CPM, desperate for adjustment with Congress till the last, contested in alliance with Lok Bhalai Party, a break-away group of Akali Dal and supported Congress on the rest of the seats. Securing 0.76% and 0.28% of the votes and failing to win even a single seat in their once-upon a-time stronghold of Punjab, they are now a pale shadow of their past, thanks to their long drawn opportunist line and tailism. In Mansa, CPI(ML) secured more votes than CPI, which was the winner in the last election and also more than BSP. Here, the Party has considerable appeal among left ranks and the poor.
In Uttarakhand, too, the grandiose plans of development with massive investment could not save the day for the Congress as all this ‘development’ with high level political corruption and the army of contractors loyal to Tiwari, never really benefited the common man.
Enthused by its trail of victories in Punjab and Uttarakhand , BJP is now making all out efforts - from fanning communal hysteria to cashing upon the popular disenchantment against Congress and Mulayam to forging alliances - to emerge as a major player in UP. However the stage is all set for battle royale between Mulayam Singh and Mayavati. Targeting Congress as its main enemy, Samajwadi Party has all along maintained tacit relationship with BJP. Mayavati, too, openly boasted after municipal elections that at many places, that she supported BJP candidates to defeat ‘Muslim Fundamentalists’. Even the UPA Railway Minister ensured train tickets at half rates for those who were to participate in VHP Sammelan in Allahabad! So much for the great secular parties in the fray. BSP, collaborating with feudal-brahminical power groups, and shedding all pretence of old Bahujan baggage, is trying to cash in on the popular anti-Mulayam sentiment. After the waning charisma of Sonia Gandhi, as exposed in the Punjab and Uttarakhand elections, Congress is now trying to manage its floundering ship with the help of the Rajiv card displayed by Rahul Gandhi. However despite all these gimmicks, only some miracle can elevate Congress from the poor fourth slot in the state. Jan Morcha, in its desperation and opportunism of joining hands with Congress has damaged the prospects of a third front and the cause of the peasant movement.
CPI(ML), with its  commitment to social security, development and democracy as against the regime of starvation, suicides and police-mafia rule, has fielded 35 candidates in its areas of struggle and political influence. The Party has also appealed to people to support the forces of mass movement at other places where it is not contesting.

– Lal Bahadur Singh