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From: Kavita Krishnan <[email protected]>
Date: Mon, May 23, 2011 at 1:05 PM
Subject: The Collapse of the ‘Left Front’ in West Bengal and the Way
Ahead for the Indian Left
To:



The Collapse of the ‘Left Front’ in West Bengal and the Way Ahead for
the Indian Left

Dipankar Bhattacharya

The inevitable has finally happened. The Left Front government of West
Bengal, the longest-serving government in India’s parliamentary
history, has been trounced quite miserably in the recent Assembly
elections. The defeat certainly has not come all of a sudden – all
recent elections including the 2008 panchayat elections, 2009 Lok
Sabha elections, 2010 municipal elections and several by-elections had
clearly revealed that the CPI(M)-led dispensation had been losing
ground quite alarmingly. The 2011 Assembly elections marked the
culmination of this process of decline of the CPI(M) in West Bengal.

Large sections of the mainstream media, in West Bengal as well as
elsewhere, have tended to treat the defeat of the CPI(M) and its
allies in West Bengal as a turning point signifying an end of sorts
for the Left in India. They also understandably rush to attribute it
to the Left’s dogmatic opposition to neo-liberal policies and Indo-US
strategic partnership. The advice naturally follows that if the Left
has to stay relevant it will have to shed its dogma and reduce Left
politics to just providing better governance without challenging the
policy environment and the politico-economic direction chosen by the
ruling elite.

The problem with this analysis is that it has nothing to do with what
has actually happened in West Bengal. In fact, the Left Front
government of West Bengal had precisely begun to follow this much
advised path of ruling class wisdom. A few years ago, Buddhadeb
Bhattacharjee was the greatest darling of the corporate media, much
like Chandrababu Naidu in his heyday or Narendra Modi, Naveen Patnaik
and Nitish Kumar in their current phases. Some media houses had even
enthusiastically elevated him to a new brand of Left politics in
India, ‘brand Buddha’ as they fondly called it. The CPI(M) has not
gone down in West Bengal resisting the LPG policies, it has just paid
the price for daring to implement those policies by trampling upon the
rights and interests of the rural poor and the labouring peasantry.

Let us look at the context and circumstances of the CPI(M)’s ouster in
West Bengal. Its government has not been toppled by a hostile Centre.
Nor has the ouster been scripted by the Tatas or some major corporate
lobbies for being denied entry into West Bengal or being driven out of
West Bengal through militant trade unionism. What has cost the CPI(M)
its flagship state is not a feudal backlash against the party’s
much-trumpeted record of land reforms. Nor is it a revolt of an
upwardly mobile middle class angered by the non-fulfilment of its
consumerist dreams of globalised grandeur. On the contrary, it is
essentially a peasant rebellion on the good old plank of land,
livelihood and democracy which has gone on to produce this most
spectacular electoral drubbing for the CPI(M).

If the dominant media analysis of the CPI(M)’s West Bengal debacle is
totally misplaced, and the therapy suggested mischievously motivated,
the CPI(M)’s own response is nothing but characteristically evasive
and hollow. Ever since the peasant protests started in Singur five
years ago, the CPI(M) dismissed it as an anti-industry campaign and
accused whoever stood by the protesting peasants of Singur of being a
Narodnik or Luddite. When Nandigram happened, the CPI(M) called it an
anti-Left conspiracy hatched jointly by  the far-right and the
ultra-left. When Lalgarh revolted against police atrocities, the
CPI(M) made common cause with the Centre to unleash a combined
paramilitary campaign. It is only after the drubbing in Lok Sabha
elections that the CPI(M) started admitting that something had gone
wrong and promised to rectify and bounce back.

But there was never any clear admission of major political mistakes,
no sincere apologies tendered for the forcible land acquisition in
Singur or the massacres in Nandigram and certainly no attempt at
course correction. This is why Nandigram was repeated in Netai and
CPI(M) leaders continued to make arrogant boasts and several leaders
went on to deliver vulgar sexist speeches reflecting a
feudal-patriarchal mindset all through the election. The debacle in
the Lok Sabha election was reduced to a simple statistical deficit of
only 11 lakh votes and words went around that the deficit could easily
be neutralized by ensuring a few additional votes in every booth!

Even now CPI(M) leaders talk in terms of bringing back the ‘deserters’
and regaining the confidence of the people who have been ‘alienated’.
There is absolutely no recognition of the sense of derailment that all
sincere Left activists and well-wishers can feel so acutely and of the
fact that what the CPI(M) is now confronting is its own increasing
isolation and even insulation from the broad masses of working people
and large sections of the progressive democratic intelligentsia, and
not just the problem of managing a few ‘dissidents’ or ‘deserters’!

Trying to put up a brave face, CPI(M) leaders now present the West
Bengal debacle as a mere defeat in one election after seven victories
in a row. They would like us to believe that the people of West Bengal
had desired change just for the sake of it, perhaps because of some
time-induced fatigue and there is nothing more to it. They also tell
us that elections are just a part of their overall political activity,
and a poor showing in one election has therefore no political
implication. But however much they may try to downplay the impact of
the Bengal blow, the fact remains that West Bengal is not just any
average state for the CPI(M). For three and a half decades now, West
Bengal was the biggest bastion of the CPI(M) and what the CPI(M) has
just experienced in Bengal is not a normal election defeat as it
experiences in Kerala in every alternate elections, but a veritable
collapse of its ‘impregnable fortress’.

We are reminded time and again by CPI(M) propagandists of their
achievement in carrying out land reforms in West Bengal and
establishing the panchayati raj in West Bengal. This inspires little
conviction today when the CPI(M) is being indicted by the rural poor
precisely for reversal of land reforms, eviction of peasants and
share-croppers and large-scale denial of routine panchayat benefits to
the deserving and the needy. It is quite like the Congress talking of
bringing independence and parliamentary democracy at a time when the
people experience growing US domination in every sphere and systematic
assault on democracy through draconian laws and military campaigns!

Ironically, the West Bengal elections have not only extracted a heavy
price from the CPI(M) for its shameless acts of opportunism and
renegacy, they have also exposed the utter political bankruptcy of the
Maoists. In the wake of the peasant revolt of Nandigram and the
adivasi resistance of Lalgarh, Maoists had found a fertile political
ground in the forested areas of the western region of West Bengal
called Jangalmahal. They flowed with the growing tide in West Bengal,
declared their support for Mamata Banerjee as the next CM and got
sensational and often sympathetic coverage in the West Bengal media.
But they were only interested in their kind of armed actions,
indiscriminately targeting CPI(M) leaders and activists and derailing
the powerful militant mass upsurge of Lalgarh in the face of
heightened state repression. When Chhatradhar Mahato, the main
surviving face of the Lalgarh movement decided to contest the Assembly
election from Jhargram, the Maoists virtually disowned him and many of
them projected it as a diversion that would help the CPI(M) and damage
the TMC’s prospect! In the event, while the TMC candidate won the
seat, Chhatradhar finished third with an impressive support of 20,000
votes.

The Mamata Banerjee-led dispensation has now taken over. As reflected
in the thumping win of the TMC-Congress combine, one can clearly see
expressions of a massive popular euphoria on the streets of West
Bengal. Perhaps such early euphoria is quite understandable at this
hour of change and transition, and there is undoubtedly an element of
spontaneity in it, but one can also clearly discern the beginning of a
very conscious, concerted and comprehensive campaign by the Right to
use this euphoria as a veritable license to launch all kinds of
attacks on all streams of Left politics and ideology. An aggressive
rightward shift would of course be out of tune with the overwhelming
spirit of the West Bengal verdict and revolutionary communists will
have to boldly invoke and nurture the popular democratic core of the
protest movements of the recent past to challenge and confront the
unfolding rightwing agenda.

It remains to be seen how the CPI(M) proposes to reinvent itself as an
opposition party in West Bengal. After 34 years of government-centric
existence, the implications of the party being forced to go back to
the people as an opposition party, and what is more, as a professed
party of class and mass struggle, will be quite interesting to watch.
For revolutionary communists and all sections of sincere Left forces,
the present juncture is surely an hour of profound possibilities and
challenges both within West Bengal and on the national political
plane. The CPI(M) model of government-centric ‘Left unity’ has
suffered an unprecedented blow and the time has surely come for the
fighting Left to regroup and march ahead with the agenda of people’s
struggles. In December 2007, the CPI(ML)’s 8th Congress held in
Kolkata had issued the clarion call: “People’s Resistance, Left
Resurgence”. There has been no dearth of powerful struggles in the
country during the last two decades of neo-liberal offensive, the Left
can move forward only by forging stronger ties with the people and
organically championing and leading the struggles of the people
through to the end. And with the government-centric, CPI(M)-centric
image of the Left getting a body blow, it is indeed time that the role
of the Left as a consistently democratic and fighting force acquired
greater prominence and the revolutionary Left came to the fore as the
driving force of the Left camp in India.

(The author is General Secretary, CPI(ML) Liberation, and the write up
is the editorial in the forthcoming June 2011 issue of Liberation.)

--
Kavita Krishnan
9560756628




--
Kavita Krishnan
9560756628




-- 


You cannot build anything on the foundations of caste. You cannot
build up a nation, you cannot build up a morality. Anything that you
will build on the foundations of caste will crack and will never be a
whole.
-AMBEDKAR



http://venukm.blogspot.com

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