It was the Communist Party of India which went into
this election with the fear of losing national party status but now it has in
its desolate corner big brother, CPI (Marxist).
With just nine seats in its kitty from three
States, the CPI(M) is two short of the criteria that has afforded it national
party status for years now. One of the various benchmarks set by the Election
Commission for according national party status to a political party is 11 seats
in the Lok Sabha from at least three States.
Now, the CPI(M) is hoping to use the two
Independents — who contested the elections in Kerala as part of the Left
Democratic Front — to build a case for retaining the national party status.
“When we are issued a show-cause by the Election Commission on why the national
party status should not be withdrawn from the CPI(M), we plan to state that
these two Independents will be joining the parliamentary party; taking our
strength in the Lok Sabha to the required 11,” said a Polit Bureau member,
while conceding it is a long shot.
The near decimation of the Left comes at a time
when the Left in general and the CPI(M) in particular is extremely demoralised
and still nursing the body blows delivered by the Trinamool Congress in
successive elections from 2008.
What has been particularly disappointing is that
the Left had hoped to make some gains in West Bengal
this time round when the field had opened from a direct fight with the TMC to a
multi-cornered battle, with the Bharatiya Janata Party emerging as a strong
contender in the State, courtesy the Modi factor.
Not only has the TMC managed to further push the
Left out, ironically the two seats that the CPI(M) won in West Bengal —
Murshidabad and Raiganj — were both from traditional Congress strongholds. Even
veteran Basudeb Acharia — who had withstood the 2009 onslaught of the TMC which
was then in coalition with the Congress — has been defeated this time in
Bankura.
Needless to say, the CPI(M) insists that the
verdict does not reflect the state of the Left in West Bengal as the verdict
was “distorted” by “widespread rigging, violence and intimidation” targeting
the Left Front. “The Election Commission failed to intervene to rectify the
situation from the third to the fifth round of polling in West
Bengal,” the CPI(M) Polit Bureau said in a statement.
While the party has retained its hold over Tripura,
the CPI(M) bettered its performance in Kerala by a seat; holding on to existing
seats. Though the party had drawn flak for fielding nearly half-a-dozen
independent candidates to reach out to the Christian community of Kerala, this
strategy has borne fruit with two of them winning.
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