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The Left parties have been out of power in West Bengal for nearly five years now. But their imprint on electoral politics has survived till date, at least on one count.
As West Bengal gears up for crucial electoral test that began today, latest available data clearly suggests that the state has bucked the trend of growing influence of money power in elections. The average assets of candidates contesting in West Bengal is less than one-third that of candidates in Assam. Even in the recently concluded elections in Bihar, the average candidate there was three times richer than in West Bengal.
What is more, there are fewer crorepati candidates in Bengal than other states that have gone to polls recently. While 21 per cent candidates in Assam have assets in excess of Rs 1 crore, there are only 12 per cent such candidates in West Bengal. Slightly less than one-fourth of all candidates who contested elections in Bihar last year had financial assets in excess of Rs 1 crore.
The rising cost of campaign finance is the likely explanation for growing preference for crorepati candidates, more so by the challenger, in most states. Studies have also shown that richer candidates are more likely to win elections. In the 2009 Lok Sabha elections, for instance, in as many as 34 per cent constituencies, candidates with highest declared assets eventually won the elections.
However, West Bengal has bucked this trend too. Data available so far show that average assets of the ruling Trinamool Congress candidates is significantly higher than that of the Congress, BJP or CPI(M) nominees.
What explains this? The answer perhaps lies in how voters are mobilised in most parts, especially in Bengal’s rural areas. During the Left rule, booth management, which included elements of coercion, would be done by the panchayat-level Marxist workers. They would coax, cajole and, if needed, use violence to ensure victory for their candidates. With the change of guard in Kolkata’s Writers Building, most of the booth management agents have switched sides and now work for the TMC.
This structure has ensured that the cost of campaign finance can be kept at more manageable levels. For this, neither are fancy video raths required nor is there any need to maintain a fleet of vehicles to reach out to voters. There is very little extra cost of hiring personnel during elections for campaigning or booth management. With campaign costs still manageable, there is little urgency on the part of political parties to have candidates who have considerable money power to offer.
This is her party’s unique selling point and is seen by observers as the real clincher. With hunger being the focal point of elections, political parties will think many times over before launching ostentatious poll campaigns.
Given the way things are, even Mamata won’t mind following this Left tradition of a frugal election campaign as long as it pays rich electoral dividend.
(The writer is Consulting Editor, Business Standard, and contributes regularly to The Quint on politics and contemporary issues)
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Published: 04 Apr 2016,04:49 PM IST