HomeNewsOpinionMamata Banerjee’s TMC remains in pole position for bypolls

Mamata Banerjee’s TMC remains in pole position for bypolls

Civil disobedience movement led by junior doctors rattled the state government. However, it won’t impact the election outcome significantly for three reasons. The movement refused to let political parties piggyback on them. It’s largely an urban middle class protest which expects the chief minister to deliver on their demands, indicating its aim is not to politically damage the government. Finally, most by-elections are in constituencies which are predominantly rural that were unaffected by the long drawn protest

October 28, 2024 / 12:26 IST
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TMC
The upcoming by-elections are being projected as an acid test of Mamata’s popularity.

It’s widely known that the future of Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath, who also happens to be a potential prime minister, hinges on the outcome of nine assembly by-elections scheduled for next month in the politically and electorally most important state of the nation. Without a doubt, the Hindutva poster boy is on the back foot; his rise or fall now depends on the number of seats he manages to swing for the Bharatiya Janata Party.

But is November, known to be a cruel month anyway, equally crucial for the career of yet another prime ministerial aspirant -- Mamata Banerjee – the Chief Minister of West Bengal where six assembly by-elections are being held along with the UP by-polls and elections in Jharkhand and Maharashtra?

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The half-a-dozen poll contests on November 13 in West Bengal will be the first trial of strength for Mamata’s Trinamool Congress after the horrific rape-cum-murder of a young woman doctor inside Kolkata’s government-run R G Kar Medical College and Hospital on August 9, which triggered an unprecedented civil disobedience movement sans political or ideological colour that is simply refusing to die down.

The prolonged, dramatic junior doctors-led agitation in the full glare of publicity, primarily by men and women in their 20s and 30s demanding not only justice for the victim but an end to systemic corruption and criminality in health administration, has inevitably brought West Bengal into sharp national focus. Televised footage of the unrest has naturally raised questions about Mamata’s authority and hold over the state rocked by continuous protests and demonstrations for over two-and-a-half months.