The Jan Andolan Party missed the bus, so did Trinamul as both
the parties set the classic example of how a failure to reach a
consensus can help a third political party.
Over the past three months or so, Kalimpong had topped on the list of
priorities of Gorkha Janmukti Morcha chief Bimal Gurung because of the
emergence of the JAP as a political force to be reckoned with here, the
state's decision to form several development boards of the hill
communities and most importantly, announcement of Kalimpong as a
separate district.
As the two parties posed challenge to the
Morcha's supremacy, Gurung camped in Kalimpong for several days, and
pledged to retain the civic body, where his party had won uncontested in
all 23 seats in 2011.
Today, he had reasons to cheer as the Morcha bagged 19 of 23 seats - seven more than the magic figure of 12.
The reason was simple - division of anti-Morcha votes between
Trinamul and the JAP, the two forces which had joined hands to take on
the dominant hill party in the 2016 Assembly polls.
"Ahead of the Assembly polls in 2016 and even after, JAP and Trinamul
leaders had excellent relations. Harka Bahadur Chhetri (the JAP chief)
contested from Kalimpong Assembly seat and Trinamul did not field a
candidate. After Harka lost the polls, the Trinamul chief inducted him
into North Bengal Development Council as the vice-chairman," an observer
said.
However, as Trinamul started making inroads into the hills and got
workers of other parties on board - including those from the JAP -
Chhetri sprung to protest.
"This move by some of the hill leaders of our party led to cracks in
the relationship. Although our state leaders and those from Siliguri
tried to address Harka's grievances, the relationship deteriorated fast
and the JAP announced that his party would go it alone in the civic
polls," said a Trinamul leader in Siliguri.
Sources in the JAP said Chhetri was confident of pulling it alone as
the JAP was ahead of the Morcha in 19 of the 23 wards, if the results of
the Assembly elections were considered.
"What JAP leaders failed to realise was that it included votes of
Trinamul supporters. Also, they should have taken into account the fact
that with the announcement of development boards and the new district,
the votes of Trinamul were likely to increase in the civic polls. On the
other hand, Trinamul should not have undermined the support base of the
JAP. The results today indicate that an alliance would have left the
Morcha in a sticky wicket," an analyst said.
As results came out, it was revealed that the Morcha got 10,872 votes
whereas the votes of the JAP and Trinamul together were 11,166.
Despite the division of anti-Morcha votes, the JAP and Trinamul
managed to secure two wards each. A closer look at the ward-wise tally
reveals that the Morcha was behind in nine more wards (wards 2, 3, 6, 8,
11, 14, 20, 21 and 22).
Trinamul leaders in the hills, when referred to the data, admitted
that a "more conciliatory approach" was necessary to avoid the
"break-up" with the JAP. They explained how the party gained by joining
hands with the GNLF in Mirik.
"It was necessary to hold talks earlier and simultaneously prevent
the local leaders from poaching the JAP's supporters. Like the GNLF, we
could have shared seats and offered more seats to the JAP," a leader
based in Kurseong said.
While the JAP is fundamentally in favour of a separate state by
bifurcating Bengal, Trinamul is opposed to any further division of the
state.
Chhetri, however, dismissed suggestions that the JAP-Trinamul alliance would have fared better.
"Maybe we might have done even worse than what we achieved today. It
takes such a long time for a good thought to translate into action. We
believe we have come up with a good thought, and if we stick to it and
work accordingly, we will succeed," he said.
Trinamul leaders, who were simultaneously eyeing Kalimpong along with
Mirik, said they need to work further to build support base.
"In Mirik, the alliance worked and we could secure the municipality.
We were expecting similar results in Kalimpong but due to a three-way
contest, we could secure only two seats," Rajen Mukhia, the president of
Hill Trinamul Congress, said.(TT)
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