CPI reviews poll rout in Bengal
The CPI has termed the drubbing of the Left in the recent Assembly elections in West Bengal as a “serious political setback’’ which calls for introspection and the need to win back the confidence of people who’ve been alienated during the span of the 34 year long rule of the Left Front in Bengal.
The CPI top leadership met here on Tuesday to review the drubbing of the Left in the recent Assembly elections in West Bengal and decided to make joint efforts to regain their lost base there.
Party sources said both the CPI as well as the CPI(M) needed to deeply introspect on the results and the drawbacks on the political, organisational and administrative fronts, including “arrogance of power” and corruption in West Bengal.
The party units in West Bengal, Kerala, Tamil Nadu and Assam placed their reports before the CPI national executive which held a detailed review of the Left’s poll performance and reasons for the humiliating defeat in Bengal.
The meeting came in the backdrop of party general secretary A.B. Bardhan warning Left leaders to “either change or you are out” and describing the Left’s debacle in West Bengal as a “defining moment”. A major factor was the alienation of minorities and scheduled castes and tribes from the Left, especially on issues concerning employment and education, they said.
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