HomeNewsPoliticsPrime contenders for Medinipur face more resistance internally than from opposition

Prime contenders for Medinipur face more resistance internally than from opposition

Actor-turned-politician June Maliah, TMC’s Medinipur MLA, is Mamata Banerjee’s trump card from Medinipur seat.

May 11, 2024 / 13:20 IST
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Supporters of Trinamool Congress (TMC) in West Bengal (Representative image)

Medinipur is probably the only Lok Sabha seat in West Bengal where both the prime contenders, the BJP and the TMC, seem more troubled with resistance from within than from the opposition outside.

Should pollsters choose to add yet another layer of political complexity to the seat, there are those who view the battle for Medinipur as that taking place between current and former TMC supporters, roughly translated into followers of party supremo Mamata Banerjee and turncoat Suvendu Adhikari, with both rooting for candidates of their choice. What could have been a cakewalk for the BJP is now an arena where the fight is thrown wide open, with the saffron camp deciding to relocate popular sitting MP and former state party president Dilip Ghosh to Bardhaman-Durgapur, replacing him with the party’s state Mahila Morcha president Agnimitra Paul as its candidate for Medinipur.

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Paul, a Kolkata-based fashion designer and sitting Asansol Dakshin MLA, has had a meteoric rise in the BJP since she was inducted into the party, ironically by Ghosh, in March 2019. She has been elevated to the rank of party state general secretary. Though critics attribute the candidate reshuffle in Medinipur to the BJP’s internal power struggle between the Ghosh and Adhikari camps representing ’veterans’ and ’newcomers’ respectively, the former has accepted the fresh challenge to prove his mettle in a hitherto uncharted territory without complaint. But that hasn’t stopped aggrieved Ghosh followers from either hanging up their boots in the run-up to the polls or jumping ship to the opponent camp.

One such disgruntled BJP veteran and Kharagpur-based businessman, 56-year-old Pradip Patnaik, joined the TMC as late as May 5 and confided in PTI about his reasons to quit the party he served for 44 years.”I gave my blood and sweat to the BJP since the 1980s when it barely had a handful of supporters in the state. I fought the parliamentary and assembly polls on the party ticket from here, where I was born and raised. But today, I find this place unsuitable for old-timers, who are cornered and are not respected,” Patnaik said.