One of the most fascinating contests in this electoral season will be in West 
Bengal. For the first time in three decades the Left looks seriously 
vulnerable. If recent trends in panchayat elections are any indication, a 
Congress-Trinamool alliance will give the Left a run for their money. Even the 
BJP has been making marginal inroads into this one impregnable bastion.

The leadership of the Left is acknowledging that this will be the toughest 
election the party has faced in years. The state government is itself 
responsible for things coming to this pass. Buddhadeb Babu may be well 
intentioned in his recognition that the state needs a new development model. 
But his own party is now seriously responsible for the unconscionable 
governance failures in West Bengal. The Singur agitation was not so much a sign 
of anti-capitalism in the state, as it was a sign of the breakdown of 
elementary governance capacities.

The governance failures of West Bengal, on virtually every indicator that 
matters -- roads, health, education, nutrition, poverty, infant mortality -- 
have recently been well documented in searing report by my colleague Bibek 
Debroy and his co-author Laveesh Bhandari. Even the much touted success in 
growth in agricultural productivity and decline in rural poverty has been 
tapering off for years. There is no question that West Bengal is ripe for a 
paradigm shift in its development model.

There is also no question that the local CPM has become a huge obstacle to the 
progress of the state. No matter how much Bengali intellectuals, out of a sense 
of misplaced nationalism, sanitise the issue, the CPM’s implication in 
violence, intimidation and coercion is extensive. It is now deeply implicated 
in the political economy of petty corruption in the state. It has virtually 
destroyed intellectual life in main institutions of the state.

The CPM has freely capitalised on its record on communalism. But the simple 
fact is that under the surface, there are deep currents of communalism brewing 
in West Bengal. The Taslima Nasreen case and the arrest of the editor of The 
Statesman were, in their own minor ways, indications of the warped and bizarre 
interpretation of secularism the party has operated with. But deeper down, 
there are rumblings of discontent on the Bangladeshi migration issue. And the 
CPM, despite having been thirty years in power, has barely been able to change 
the tenor of debate on these issues amongst the middle classes in Bengal. In 
fact, a case could be made that if the BJP had got its act together, Bengal 
would have provided a propitious fishing ground. The calm surface of politics 
there is deceptive.

It is in this context that Mamata’s achievement should be gauged. No matter 
what one may think of her policies or her mercurial ways, the simple fact is 
that she has single handedly kept political opposition alive in West Bengal. 
Anyone who knows how difficult it is for any non-Left force to operate in the 
state, the risk of violence it entails, will appreciate the sheer courage and 
doggedness it has taken on Mamata’s part to keep open a political space. I 
suspect the BJP did not engage in mass mobilization in Bengal, not because 
there was no traction for them. In some ways the state is ripe for a critique 
of pseudo-secularism. It was simply that they were too afraid. Mamata’s 
armchair detractors in Delhi underestimate this achievement.

She probably overplayed her hand in the Singur agitation. But the fact is that 
the demands she made on behalf of the poor were not unreasonable. She knew the 
possibility existed that the Tatas could move. But what no one could have 
bargained for was the fact that Gujarat would not just offer land to the Tatas, 
but such a huge implicit subsidy from public funds. It was natural that the 
Tatas would take the deal. But two things have to be acknowledged. First, the 
terms of the deal have not received as much public discussion as they should. 
And it has certainly reduced the Tatas' incentives for a reasonable settlement.

But it is important to draw the right lessons from this episode. It would be a 
mistake to conclude that the Trinamool is some kind of Luddite anti-capitalist 
party, while Buddhadeb is the saviour of capitalism. The right lesson is that 
the state government has diminishing capacity to manage conflict, and an 
insurgent politician was stepping into the breach to portray herself as a 
defender of the poor.

The election outcome is still an open question. Will urban Bengal rally around 
Buddhadeb? What will be the effects of delimitation? Will the CPM party machine 
kick in? These are all open questions. But we should keep our fingers crossed 
for West Bengal. When longstanding, somewhat authoritarian, regimes begin to 
weaken, all kinds of forces begin to emerge. It is hard to predict how it will 
all turn out. West Bengal is ripe for such a churning.

It is also such an unconscionable shame that the CPM could not use its immense 
political hold on the state to do better for its citizens. At the national 
level, there is also a great need for a sensible Left. At the national level it 
was the only party that for five years performed. At the very least, its 
cautionary breaks on our unthinking embrace of the United States, was a sign of 
its better judgment. But the evidence from West Bengal is now decisively in: 
the party has become an obstacle to creating opportunities for the poor.

There are signs of immense confusion within the Left. It is encouraging the 
Third Front, because it recognizes its weaknesses in its home bases in West 
Bengal and Kerala. Its best shot at remaining relevant and to consolidate, is 
intelligent alliances elsewhere. It is right to insist that there is enough 
disenchantment with both the BJP and Congress to open up the space for 
something new. But it is mistaken in supposing that it has a leg to stand on. 
It risks losing its distinctiveness even more. It obdurately resisted playing 
the caste card for fifty years, when that card carried some pretence of 
empowering the marginalized. But just at the point where the caste card has 
become not a vehicle for empowerment, but of raw assertion of political power, 
the Left has gone and embraced it wholesale. The ideological confusions in the 
Left are a sign that it cannot run on its governance record, and is now 
flailing. Perhaps if it had paid as much attention to Buddhadeb’s weaknesses as 
it had to Bush’s, it might not have been in such a state.

http://www.indianexpress.com/story_print.php?storyid=437375 

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