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Revisionism Saves The Day

Bengal바카라™s beleaguered comrades push a changed 바카라˜Yechury line바카라™ down hardliners바카라™ throats in the party congress

Revisionism Saves The Day
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When the challenge posed by the adversary is tough, even seemingly inflexible ideolo­gical 바카라˜lines바카라™ can be bent. On the very first day of its party congress held in Hyd­erabad from April 18 to 22, the CPI(M) amended the political resolution it had adopted in its central committee meeting in January in Calcutta. In the party바카라™s 54-year history, this was a first and it marked an urgency, according to some Bengal Communists. Speaking to Outlook after the party congress concluded, former CPI(M) central committee member  Gautam Deb says it바카라™s 바카라œthe need to set things right without further delay바카라.

Deb was among those to have supported general secretary Sitaram Yechury바카라™s proposed draft during the Calcutta meeting, which advocated working with other secular democratic parties, namely the Con­gress, in order to fight the BJP. In fact, most of Bengal바카라™s CPI(M) leaders were fav­ourably disposed towards this argument, known as the 바카라˜Yechury line바카라™. In the January meeting, it was rejected outright. Three months down the line now, a middle path has been adopted. In short, though a political alliance with the Congress has been ruled out, an understanding and coo­peration with secular parties, including the Congress, with a goal to combat and oust the BJP, is not.

A section of the Bengal CPI(M) blames its calamitous defeat in the 2011 assembly elections, when it lost power to Mamata Banerjee바카라™s Trinamool Congress after a continuous reign of 34 years, to its severing ties with the Congress바카라”CPI(M)바카라™s withdrawal of support in 2008 to UPA-1 at the Centre still rankles with some. That break drove the Congress into the Trinamool바카라™s waiting arms, thus unifying the votes against the Left Front. However, subsequently, political experts have dismissed the idea that the CPI(M) lost bec­ause of the alliance. 바카라œThe party lost owing to three decades of anti-incumbency and because the Trinamool finally provided an alternative,바카라 explains political scientist Biswanath Chakraborty.

Now that the rampaging behemoth the Trinamool has grown to be is bent on extirpating Left influence in Bengal, the CPI(M) has been trying to re-unite with the Congress in order to make a stand and fight and, if possible, regain lost ground. The defeat of Yechury바카라™s line in the January central committee meeting was a big blow to this plan. Its votaries now rejoice at the changes brought at the party congress. 바카라œA course correction has taken place,바카라 Deb reiterates. 바카라œBut we have also wasted a lot of time.바카라 He will not clarify whether he refers to the defeat of the Left in Tripura after the resolution in Calcutta, but he says that 바카라œdemocratic and secular parties should unite without any more dilly-dallying; otherwise it will be difficult to fight the BJP바카라™s aggressive advance, far less stamp it out of power.바카라

For a particular section of the Bengal CPI(M), the Hyderabad party congress  was a 바카라˜do or die바카라™ affair. 바카라œWe were sure of what we wanted. The option of keeping our door open for the Congress was high on our agenda,바카라 says a former CPI(M) MP, adding that 바카라œeven a split in the party was being discussed if the hard line taken by the central committee in Calcutta was not softened바카라.

The issue of whether the CPI(M) would stick to its political resolution vis-a-vis the Congress became a key focus of the party congress not just for the sake of the party바카라™s unity, but because many members felt it would determine the course of regional and national politics. If the saffron tide in Bengal has to be stemmed, they argued, 바카라˜democratic and secular바카라™ forces have to unite.

Party members do not confirm if the debacle in Tripura prompted the ret­hink, but when the steering committee recommended the amendment, the hardliners didn바카라™t put up a fight.

In the amended political draft, the words 바카라œwithout having an understanding with the Congress Party바카라 was rem­oved, though the phrase 바카라œwithout having a political alliance with the Congress Party바카라 was retained. This was felt to be a 바카라˜middle of the road바카라™ app­roach which, without compromising the ideological or economic position, did not rule out working with other secular parties in order to fight communalism.

Importantly, the subtle change in line is also being seen in the light of the so-called rift between 65-year-old Yechury and influential ideologue Prakash Karat, 70. Just as the central committee바카라™s app­roval of the earlier political draft was being called a loss for Yechury, some analysts are terming the current changes a defeat for former general secretary Karat, who strongly advocates the party바카라™s working independently, without the Congress.

Party insiders, however, deny any rift. CPI(M) MP, politburo and central committee member, Mohammed Salim told Outlook, 바카라œThere is no truth to reports of a rift between individual members.... There are diverse views and strong opinions, but the party congress in Hyderabad proved that...though there are heated exchanges and arguments, in the end we speak with a unified voice.바카라 Salim also said that while the party바카라™s decision on the Congress was important, it was not the sole agenda: 바카라œIt was our party congress and not a congress of the Congress Party바카라.

Indeed, the party congress also ushe­red in a new central committee and Politburo and re-elected general secretary Yechury to a second term amidst speculation about the split between hardliners and moderates of the Bengal unit, who support him. According to experts, the CPI(M)바카라™s Bengal unit stands firmly beh­ind Yechury. 바카라œThis is because of his pro-Congress stance,바카라 explains political commentator Tarun Ganguly. But he adds that the CPI(M) politburo and central committee, in spite of the revision in posture, are still reported to be 바카라œtipped in favour of the Prakash Karat line바카라.

Truth be told, the Bengal CPI(M)바카라™s not strictly adhering to the party line and hobnobbing with other parties have come in for criticism earlier from ideological purists. In an earlier interview to Outlook, former Left minister and CPI(M) veteran Ashok Mitra expressed concern that the party was 바카라œfighting against the Congress for 30 days of the month and supporting it in some issue on the 31st. (He was specifically referring to the CPI-M바카라™s support for Pranab Muk­herjee as a presidential can­di­­date)바카라. This, Mitra had said, led the party away from a path of people바카라™s movements based on specific principles and ideologies.

However, the just-concluded party congress is supposed to have inducted more supporters of the Yechury camp. Of the 95 members of the central committee, 19 are new entries; at least half of them are said to belong to the Yechury camp. And newly-elected Politburo members from Bengal include 바카라˜moderates바카라™ like Tapan Sen and Nilotpal Basu.

Speaking to Outlook, Basu explains that the Hyderabad party congress rev­iewed the last three years and charted the party바카라™s political course for the next three. On how far Bengal will be imp­acted by the political resolution and whether it will make a significant difference, Basu says, 바카라œThe upcoming Panchayat polls and the bloodshed over filing of nominations are indication that democracy is under attack in this state. Congress and CPI(M) have already been working together to stand up to such anarchy.바카라

And the damp squib that was the 바카라˜unified바카라™ Congress-CPI(M) front in the 2016 assembly elections? Mohammed Salim explains, 바카라œThat was too close to the elections. It was premature. We have to work together in order to gain the trust of the people and to be credible.바카라

Mistakes have to be learnt from, not dwelt upon obsessively. This time around, Bengal바카라™s comrades trust on astute planning for the new political draft to be a game-changer for Bengal in the near future.

By Dola Mitra in Calcutta

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