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Sporting TMC shades
A hawker selling Mamata Baneree paraphernalia
TMC worker sitting on the divider waiting for the rally to start
A differently-abled man came all the way on his wheelchair from Howrah Station to Dharmatala to watch Mamata Banerjee
"So many people can't go all the way to the front, so I am putting up a symbolic gesture for the people at the back." - Raju Shau
There was an overwhelming presence of women, who have been a very loyal votebank for Mamata Banerjee and TMC
The skies grew darker, but scores of people kept marching towards the stage
People came from across the state in trucks, buses, tempos and even bicycles.
The Trinamool Congress hosted the Shahid Dibas after two years to a roaring crowd that stretched for miles. Even a heavy downpour didn’t stop the proceedings as scores of TMC supporters who had come from various parts of the state stood to listen to their leaders.
In fact, it might have just given India's political scene a new iconic image, a bit like Sharad Pawar's rally in the rain in Satara during the 2019 Maharashtra elections.
The Shahid Dibas was held at Kolkata’s Dharmatala after a COVID-hiatus of two years, to mark the death anniversary of 13 West Bengal Youth Congress cadres in police firing while protesting the then Jyoti Basu-led CPIM government, on 21 July 1993. Mamata Banerjee, who was the West Bengal Youth Congress leader, too had sustained injuries.
Since coming to power in 2011, 21 July is observed not only as Martyrs’ Day, but also a platform for the Trinamool to showcase their strength and send a political message. In 2019, Mamata Banerjee used this event to boost the morale of the TMC cadre after a disappointing Lok Sabha elections result.
TMC All-India General Secretary Abhishek Banerjee, followed by Mamata Banerjee, both attacked the BJP moments into taking the podium. They attacked the BJP over GST, inflation and allegedly using central agencies like CBI and ED to harass opposition leaders.
Mamata Banerjee, in her own unique style of politics, used puffed rice to attack the Centre over the recent imposition of GST on certain food items.
While addressing the rally, she stopped to ask if anyone had any muri (puffed rice). Kolkata mayor Firhad Hakim gets it onto the stage. She pours some on a plate, holds it in one hand and raises the issue of GST.
During her speech, a large LPG cylinder replica was brought upon the stage too, to showcase rising prices. LPG cylinders in Kolkata are priced at over Rs. 1000.
While ‘muri politics’ might find its way into some primetime debates or twitter hashtags, Banerjee’s clever usage of a poor man’s predominant staple meal to showcase the fact that people must spend more, was a message loud and clear.
While attacking the BJP on the national front, Banerjee also gave a significant amount of importance to the CPI-M in West Bengal albeit by attacking them.
The surprising part to her giving CPI-M that space arises because it currently has 0 Assembly seats in the state and the BJP is the main opposition party.
Banerjee did not spend any time attacking the BJP in the state, but instead attacked the CPIM, specifically ex-Kolkata mayor and CPI-M MP Bikas Ranjan Bhattacharya. Bhattacharya was the lawyer who took the WB government to court over several alleged recruitment scams recently.
She highlighted that there was corruption and scams during the time of the CPI-M too.
Giving the CPI-M an adequate amount of importance during what might be called TMC’s grandest event of the year might just be an indicator as to whom the party would rather have as the opposition in the state.
What was probably the part that supporters and political pundits were looking forward to the most was the party’s roadmap to 2024. While they did not reveal anything new, their message was straightforward.
She further claimed that the 2024 elections will not be a vote for election, but a vote for rejection.
Mamata Banerjee and Abhishek Banerjee both emphasized their national expansion plans and hardly spent any time on the upcoming panchayat polls.
On the national front, Mamata Banerjee claimed that they will win all the seats in West Bengal in 2024.
She repeatedly spoke about the opposition coming together and putting up a united front to defeat the BJP. What was surprising here is that the same party which was attacking the Congress tooth and nail until a few months ago, did not mention the party’s name even once.
In fact, the only time the grand old party was mentioned was when Sudip Bandopadhyay referred to Congress president Sonia Gandhi being summoned by the ED on 21 July.
What bolstered these speculations is when Abhishek Banerjee during the press conference that evening said that if the TMC wanted, they could have tried to expand in Congress-ruled states, but they only went for states that are governed by the BJP.
However, Mamata Banerjee also mentioned that in 2024, she wants “one courageous, cultural, secular and ideal party in India, and that will be Trinamool Congress.”
On the state front, it was a sight to behold when a GTA Chief stood in Kolkata and shouted ‘Joy Bangla’. TMC has already made their foothold in the hills, and GTA Chief Anit Thapa attending the Shahid Dibas, and talking about working hand in hand with the TMC to solve the issues of the hills shows how much the dynamics in the hills have changed recently.
(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)
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