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Even as the opposition Left Front and the Congress go through a labyrinth of procedures in their bid to cobble up a possible alliance for the assembly polls later this year, West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee has forged ahead with a clear-cut three-pronged strategy to charm the voters.
The Trinamool Congress supremo has been showering goodies aplenty on various sections of the people to drive home her development agenda, wooing the minorities who comprise a sizable part of the population, and scouting for potential allies to widen her base.
While populism has always been an integral part of her polity, Banerjee has been raining sops by inaugurating a plethora of projects across the state, announcing distribution of foodgrain at Rs 2/kg and doling out scholarships to girls, bicycles and shoes to students and loans to the jobless youth for self-employment.
Among the several schemes she has been tom-toming is her pet Kanyashree project – a cash-transfer programme for the education of girls which has even been recognised by UNICEF – and the Sabooj Sathi scheme under which four million government school students are entitled to get bicycles.
In her frequent public meets, Banerjee has also been claiming that her government has provided jobs to over 6.8 million youths across the state.
While the opposition has been targeting Banerjee over the “dismal” industrial scenario and agrarian distress, political analyst Anil Kumar Jana asserts the sops showered will play a large role in influencing the voters.
“Banerjee has of late been ensuring the smooth implementation of central schemes, thereby sending out a signal that it was her government that is doling out benefits when in fact it is using only the central funds,” Jana opined.
Often accused by the opposition of indulging in appeasement politics, Banerjee has been reaching out to influential minority leaders of the likes of Siddiqullah Chowdhury of the All India United Democratic Front and Toha Siddiqui, the peerzada of Furfura Sharif, a prominent shrine for Bengali Muslims.
While Chowdhury has announced his party would align with the Trinamool for the assembly polls, Banerjee got a further shot in the arm by inducting former state minister and one-time frontline CPI-M leader Abdur Rezzak Mollah into the party fold.
Amid the countrywide debate over growing intolerance, Banerjee also scored some brownie points on the secular front by hosting Pakistani ghazal maestro Ghulam Ali in the city.
Despite vowing to never return to India after his concert was cancelled in Maharashtra following threats by the Shiv Sena last October, the legendary singer was elated and expressed gratitude to Banerjee after his performance in the city on 12 January.
Cultivating new allies in areas of the state where her party is comparatively weak, Banerjee has roped in the Gorkha Janmukti Morcha ideologue and legislator Harka Bahadur Chhetri, who has broken ranks with his parent party and formed the Jana Andolan Party political platform.
The GJM’s split could stand the Trinamool in good stead in Darjeeling hills and adjoining areas of northern Bengal, even if the Left and the Congress succeed in forming an alliance.
(Anurag Dey can be contacted at anurag.d@ians.in. This column was published in an arrangement with IANS.)
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Published: 15 Feb 2016,01:38 PM IST