TMC Offers 2 Lok Sabha Seats To INDIA Bloc Ally Congress In Bengal: Report

TMC Offers 2 Lok Sabha Seats To INDIA Bloc Ally Congress In Bengal: Report
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The Trinamool Congress has offered two West Bengal Lok Sabha seats to its INDIA ally Congress for the upcoming general elections.

2024 Lok Sabha Elections: The Congress has been offered two Lok Sabha seats for next year’s general elections in West Bengal by its INDIA bloc partner Trinamool Congress (TMC) as the Mamata Banerjee-led party believes that the dominant party in the state should be the one calling the shots on seat-sharing in their region of dominance.
Citing sources, India Today reported that the TMC’s seat allocation to Congress is based on a “clear formula” which takes into consideration the parliamentary and state assembly elections.
The TMC believes that the ruling regional party should be allowed to decide the seat-sharing number in their state, the sources said, according to the report.
Kharge better choice as INDIA convenor: TMC
As per the report, the TMC also reiterated its stance on Congress chief Mallikarjun Kharge as its preferred choice as INDIA bloc convener as it believes that Kharge would have a better impact in the role as opposed to Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar, whose name has recently propped up as the likely candidate for the role.
They said that, Kharge, who belongs to the Dalit community, can influence around 58 seats and as such should be the preferred option.
The INDIA bloc, at its last meeting in Delhi, had decided to finalize the seat-sharing talks for next year’s polls at the earliest even as the TMC had sought December 31, 2023, as the deadline for resolving the seat-sharing talks.
However, nothing concrete has materialized so far as the Opposition bloc is yet to arrive at a consensus on the issue.
Internal strife mars TMC ahead of LS polls
Meanwhile, internal rift continues to widen within the TMC ranks, with senior party leaders trading verbal assaults on Wednesday, even as even as the party leadership issued a subtle call for setting aside grievances and focusing on the upcoming Lok Sabha elections.
The recent controversy unfolded after West Bengal Chief Minister and TMC leader Mamata Banerjee had in November advocated the need to give due respect to senior members and rejected the notion that elderly leaders should retire from active politics.
The TMC rift
Following this, TMC national general secretary Abhishek Banerjee, Mamata Banerjee’s nephew, proposed a retirement age in politics, citing declining work efficiency and productivity with advancing age. The party has since become a battleground for allegations and counter-allegations between senior and young leaders.
The tensions reached a new low when five-time TMC MLA Tapas Ray criticised veteran leader and TMC’s Lok Sabha party leader Sudip Bandopadhyay, accusing him of compromising the party’s interests for personal political gains.
Ray emphasised, “We are loyal soldiers of the TMC. We have given our entire life for the party. We are neither tainted nor have been in prison on corruption charges.”
Referring to Bandopadhyay’s past arrest in the Rose Valley scam in January 2017, Ray questioned his contributions to the party and accused him of insulting old and tested party workers.
Ray said, “What has he done for the party apart from insulting old and tested party workers? He is now trying to create a division within the party. The kind of insult he has hurled at me for the last 15 years is unacceptable. I want justice.”
In response, senior TMC minister Firhad Hakim urged everyone to refrain from making such remarks in public domain and instead address issues through internal discussions within the party.
“Everyone should stop making such remarks in the public domain and sort out issues through discussions within the party,” he said.
Calls for unity
During a closed-door organisational meeting with the Bankura district unit, TMC leader Subrata Bakshi encouraged party workers to set aside grievances and work unitedly for the party.
The debate gained momentum on the party’s foundation day on Monday when TMC state president Subrata Bakshi, known for his loyalty to Mamata Banerjee, expressed hope that Abhishek Banerjee would contest the upcoming Lok Sabha election with Mamata Banerjee’s photo and not shy away from the field.
He said, “Abhishek Banerjee is our national general secretary. Naturally, if Abhishek fights this election, we are sure that he will not back down from the fray. If he fights, he will fight with the photo of Mamata Banerjee and the party symbol.”
Bakshi’s statement drew objections from the party’s state general secretary Kunal Ghosh who called for a retraction.
Ghosh emphasised, “I respect the state president, but I have objections to his phrasing of words. It is never desired. Abhishek is still in the fray. If the party listens to what he (Abhishek) wants to say, it is good for the party.”
In November, Ghosh, who is also the party spokesperson, addressed rumours of a power struggle, asserting that there is no conflict between the old and new factions, emphasising the necessity of both Mamata Banerjee and Abhishek Banerjee for the party.
Old guards battles younger faction
This ongoing controversy recalls a two-year-old internal struggle within the TMC between the old guard and the younger faction.
Amidst rumours of an alleged power struggle in January 2022, TMC supremo Mamata Banerjee dissolved all national office-bearer committees, including the post of national general secretary held by her nephew Abhishek Banerjee.
Subsequently, a new committee was formed, and Abhishek was reinstated as the party’s national general secretary.
Since then, Abhishek has not only gained prominence within the party but is also considered the de facto number two in the state’s ruling dispensation.
(With PTI inputs)
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