West Bengal: Local bodies’ elections

From Indpaedia
Revision as of 00:16, 28 February 2022 by Jyoti Sharma (Jyoti) (Talk | contribs)

Jump to: navigation, search

Hindi English French German Italian Portuguese Russian Spanish

This is a collection of articles archived for the excellence of their content.



Contents

Civic polls/ 2017

May 2017

Tamaghna Banerjee, West Bengal civic polls: Trinamool Congress wins 4 municipalities, GJM 3 , May 17, 2017: The Times of India


TMC wins 4, GJM 3 civic bodies in WB, May 18, 2017: The Times of India


West Bengal's ruling Trinamool Congress maintained their supremacy, emerging victorious in four municipalities while GJM managed to retain control in three in the northern hills but the Congress-Left Front alliance and the BJP came a cropper in the civic poll results announced. The Trinamool virtually wiped out all opposition in the plains where it won Raiganj, Domkal and Pujali municipalities.Congress was decimated in its strongholds, while the BJP, bidding to come up as the main opposition, managed to win only three wards. IANS

Trinamool Congress won four out of the seven Bengal towns that had gone into municipal election and created history by taking control of a Mirik Municipality in the hills and becoming the first political mainstream political party from the plains to win an election in the last three decades.

Trinamool Congress won Pujali in south 24 parganas, Domkal in Murshidabad, Raiganj in north Dinajpur and Mirik in Darjeeling. In all the four municipalities, Trinamool Congress swept the election results.

At Pujali, TMC won 12 out of the 16 wards with BJP coming second with only 2 wards. At Domkal, TMC won 20 out of the 21 wards. The opposition of Congress - Left alliance had initially won 3 wards but immediately after the results, two of them - Rafikul Islam of ward 20 and Ashadul Islam of ward 9 joined Trinamool Congress, cutting down their tally to just 1. This was the first ever election for the Domkal Municipality.

Raigani Municipality, that was in control of Congress prior to the election was also swept by the TMC that won 24 out of the 27 wards. At Mirik TMC won 6 out of 9 wards, beating the Gorkha Janmukti Morcha - BJP alliance for the first time for any political party in the plains since 1986.

The three other towns in the hills - Darjeeling, Kalimpong and Kurseong however remained in control with GJM even as TMC. GJM won 31 out of the 32 seats in Darjeeling and 17 out of 20 wards in Kurseong. At Kalimpong, whose results, came out last among the seven municipalities was also won by the GJM- BJP alliance. The alliance led in 11 out of 23 wards while Harka Bahadur Chhetri led Jan Andolan Party (JAP) won 2 seats and TMC won 2 seats.

Aroop Biswas, the state minister and the Trinamool Congress observer for Darjeeling district said the win at Mirik was the result of chief minister Mamata Banerjee's tireless efforts at the hills and said democracy was restored in several years for the first time in the hills.

"Mamata Banerjee visited the hills several times and has been able to understand the needs of the people and have been able to convince them about their rights. Mirik has opened the doors of development in the hills and we will take it forward to the other places from here and are sure to fare even better in the hills in the coming years," said Biswas.

Trinamool general secretary Partha Chattopadhyay said the wins did not come to him by surprise. "We were expecting the wins but the margin of the victory has been satisfying. At Mirik, people had complained that those in power had done little development and had misused the funds so they have voted for us. Our motto is development and that is the path we are going to tread," he said.

On the day of the election, violence was reported from all the three plains towns that went to vote -Pujali in the south (South 24-Parganas), Domkal in the middle (Murshidabad) and Raiganj in the north (North Dinajpur) -though the four Hills towns that voted for new civic agencies (Darjeeling, Kalimpong, Kurseong and Mirik) were peaceful.

State Congress chief Adhir Chowdhury petitioned PM Narendra Modi against alleged rigging of local polls and Left and Congress supporters demonstrated outside the office of the state election commission in Kolkata demanding polls be scrapped all together. The West Bengal Election Commission on Monday ordered a repoll at six booths of three municipalities that took place.

Commenting on the results, opposition parties blamed TMC's alleged violence politics the reason behind their crushing defeat. "Everyone has seen how elections had happened this time. It was a farce in the name of election and after the way they rigged the votes, this result was expected," said Congress leader Prakash Upadhyay.

CPM youth leader Satarup Ghosh said he was unhappy with the way two Congress - Left alliance leaders at Domkal joined TMC right after the win but also criticized TMC for taking them. "This is disgraceful on part of the two to not to respect the people who have voted for them and change parties right after the win. But how could even TMC take them?" he said.

August 2017

TMC sweeps Bengal civic polls, BJP emerges as main challenger, Aug 17, 2017: The Times of India


HIGHLIGHTS

The Left put up a poor show with the Forward Bloc winning a seat in Nalhati municipality

The Congress failed to win even a single seat in the polls.

TMC sweeps Bengal civic polls, BJP emerges as main challenger


KOLKATA: The Trinamool Congress swept the municipal polls in West Bengal+ capturing all the seven civic bodies while the BJP finished second in most places relegating the Left to the third position.

The BJP won six seats in three municipalities which included four in Dhupguri in north Bengal and one each in Buniyadpur (north Bengal) and Panskura in south Bengal, according to the results of the August 13 civic elections.

The TMC bagged also seats in Panskura and Haldia in East Midnapore district, Nalhati in Birbhum, Buniyadpur in South Dinajpur and Dhupguri in Jalpaiguri districts. The party also registered a massive victory in Durgapur Municipal Corporation in Burdwan West district capturing all the 43 wards, besides Cooper's Camp where it won all the 12 seats.

In Haldia municipality also, the TMC got elected in all the 29 seats, according to the results declared. The election results were indicative of a paradigm shift in the state politics with the BJP emerging as the main challenger to the TMC, according to poll watchers.

The Left put up a poor show with the Forward Bloc, a front partner, winning a seat in Nalhati municipality. The Congress failed to win even a single seat in the polls.

In Haldia municipality, once considered as a Left bastion, the TMC won all the 29 wards securing more than 50 per cent of the total votes polled. Of the 16 seats in Dhupguri municipality in north Bengal, the TMC won 12 seats while the BJP captured four.

Out of the 14 wards in Buniyadpur, also in north Bengal, the TMC won 13 wards and the BJP bagged one seat. In Nalhati municipality, the TMC won 14 of the 16 wards, while the Left Front and an independent candidate won one ward each. In 18-member Panskura municipality, the TMC won 17 wards and the BJP managed to secure one ward. The TMC also won the by-election in a ward in Jhargram municipality.

"The results are a reflection of people's faith in the TMC government and a befitting reply to the canards spread against us," TMC secretary general Partha Chatterjee said, reacting to the outcome of the civic polls.

On the BJP's performance, senior TMC leader Gautam Deb said, "The Left Front has shifted its vote to the BJP. The vote share of the TMC is intact, rather we have increased our vote share.

"It is the Left which is having a tacit understanding with the BJP," he said. State BJP president Dilip Ghosh, however, said, "We all know that the TMC used money and muscle power to win the elections. We have seen how democracy was subverted by the TMC.

"In spite of a reign of terror, we have managed to win seats and come up to the second position," he said. The opposition called the civic election results a "farce", with the Congress and the Left stressing that it was "not a real reflection" of the people's mandate. State Congress president Adhir Chowdhury said the TMC was ruling was "autocratically" .

"What is the use of conducting elections in Bengal? The TMC doesn't allow free and fair elections. If an opposition candidate manages to win, they poach on him," he said. "We feel these results are not the reflection of people's mandate. After the elections were held, we had demanded cancellation of the entire elections as it was not free and fair," senior CPI(M) leader Sujan Chakraborty said.

2018

Zilla parishad, panchayat samite, gram panchayat elections: TMC 1, BJP 2

TMC leads Bengal rural polls, BJP a surprise No. 2, May 18, 2018: The Times of India


Trinamool Congress has gained an unprecedented stranglehold on Bengal’s three-tier village administrative system, gaining 95% of zilla parishad seats, 90% of panchayat samiti seats and 73% of gram panchayat seats that went to polls and for which results were declared.

More than a third of the seats this time did not see any contest and the Calcutta high court stayed announcement of those results in a directive last week. If and when those results are announced, the Trinamool’s victory percentage may only improve as most of the “walkover winners” this time are, according to officials, likely to be Trinamool candidates.

Trinamool Congress chief Mamata dedicated the massive victory to “the people of Bengal and martyrs’ families”.

The opposition cried foul, calling the 2018 panchayat election “a farce”. But, either way, Bengal seems to be headed largely for a bipolar fight in the 2019 Lok Sabha election as BJP has successfully emerged as party number two — even though a distant runner-up — in most of the districts. CPM and Congress stand virtually decimated in even their strongholds, finishing the race as fringe players fighting for third and fourth places, which is a firming up of the trend seen in the August 2017 civic polls for seven municipalities.

Villagers voted for ‘lotus’ in large numbers in Alipurduar, Jalpaiguri, Jhargram, Purulia and parts of West Midnapore and even Birbhum, which stood out for the large number of uncontested seats, where BJP won more than 20% of gram panchayats that went to vote. Analysts read in this a growing indication of dissent against Trinamool.

All the districts where BJP has done well have something in common: a substantial tribal population. The consolidation of anti-Trinamool votes behind BJP shows this bloc can disturb the settled political hierarchy in at least the three Lok Sabha seats named after the districts (Alipurduar, Jalpaiguri and Jhargram).

Trinamool, on the other hand, has successfully decimated Congress in Murshidabad and taken a massive lead in Malda and North Dinajpur — all erstwhile Congress strongholds — which means it will be in pole position in as many as six Lok Sabha seats (Murshidabad, Behrampore, Jangipur, Malda Uttar, Malda Dakshin and Raiganj) next year.

2019

Bhatpara: BJP wins

Sanjib Chakraborty, June 5, 2019: The Times of India


BJP gets its first civic body after Lok Sabha polls

Bhatpara:

BJP took control of the Bhatpara municipality in North 24 Parganas and promptly elected TMC-turned-BJP councillor Sourav Singh as its chairman. Bhatpara is the first civic body in Bengal to come under BJP’s control after the 2019 Lok Sabha elections.Sixteen of the 22 TMC councillors who had voted against chairman Arjun Singh in the no-trust vote held two months ago switched sides to upend the results.

Bhatpara municipality has been in the midst of a political see-saw since March 14 when chairman Arjun Singh dumped TMC to join BJP.

2021

Kolkata Municipal Corporation elections

Dec 22, 2021: The Times of India

Trinamool Congress won 134 of the 144 seats in Kolkata Municipal Corporation (KMC) elections with a 72% vote share that reflected the afterglow of its assembly poll landslide eight months ago. In a first, KMC will now have 68 women councillors, 64 of them from TMC. This works out to 47% of the seats in the House.

Kolkata’s next mayor will be decided on Thursday, Mamata Banerjee said after trends showed TMC was on its way to the best showing by any party in a KMC poll.

BJP’s Kol vote share dips from May high of 20% to Dec low of 9%

Kolkata is our pride...The elections were like a festival. This is a win for democracy...,” the CM said before leaving for Guwahati to offer prayers at Kamakhya temple. “BJP bho-katta (the BJP has been decimated) by the people, CPM no-patta (the CPM has not been acknowledged), and the Congress is sandwiched between the BJP and the CPM,” she said. The results had an element of inevitability and predictability, with Trinamool building on its organisation and taking advantage of opposition parties’ listlessness since its spectacular showing in the assembly polls last May.

The Left won 11% votes. BJP saw its Kolkata vote share dip from a May high of 20% to a December low of 9%. BJP will now have three representatives in the new KMC. Congress won 4.4% of the vote share, which translated into two seats. A comparative analysis of the May and December vote share of Trinamool, BJP and the Left makes one thing clear: the votes gained by the saffron party in May, said to have gone to it from the LF kitty, now seem to have made their way to Trinamool. The Left Front and Congress finished second in 65 and 16 of KMC’s 144 wards, respectively, with BJP being the runner-up in 48 seats.

All 16 KMC boroughs will now Trinamool chairpersons. Independents won three seats but, by the end of Tuesday, all of them had expressed their desire to join Trinamool.

2022

Civic bodies

February 15, 2022: The Times of India


Kolkata: Trinamool won with an overwhelming majority all four municipal corporations that voted last weekend, reinforcing the party’s grip on Bengal’s five of the biggest cities. BJP won just 12 seats in the four civic bodies, which undermines its growth as the state’s main opposition party.

Trinamool won 39 of 41 seats in the politically significant Bidhannagar Municipal Corporation, 91 of 106 in the state’s second largest city Asansol, 37 of 47 in north Bengal’s biggest city Siliguri and 31 of Chandernagore’s 33 seats. The party already has a 135-out-of-144 majority in Kolkata corporation.


TMC gets boost in N Bengal, where BJP made big gains in ’21

BJP didn’t win any in either Bidhannagar or Chandernagore and managed single-digit figures in Asansol (seven) and Siliguri (five) — keeping with the slide since the 2021 assembly polls. Voters of Bidhannagar and Chandernagore relegated the party to the third position, behind the Left Front in terms of percentage of votes (8.3% in both). BJP was in second place in Siliguri, where it got a sizeable 23.2% votes, and Asansol (17%). But here, too, the gap with TMC was yawning. 
“I wish we become more humble, capable and committed to working for the people with every victory. I plead with every Trinamool worker not to react to instigations and keep celebrations civilised with only one slogan: the Trinamool thanks everyone,” Bengal CM Mamata Banerjee said.


This is the first time TMC will be forming the Siliguri Municipal Corporation board. Besides, the Siliguri win will likely allow Trinamool to consolidate in north Bengal, where BJP led in the 2021 assembly polls.


BJP’s slide in Bengal would be worrying for its leadership as the party fancied itself as the principal challenger to TMC till last year’s assembly polls.

Personal tools
Namespaces

Variants
Actions
Navigation
Toolbox
Translate