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West Bengal state elections: Left Front lurches further right
By Arun Kumar and Keith Jones
8 May 2006
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The Left Fronts campaign to win re-election in West Bengal,
Indias third most populous state, has exemplified its role
as a political prop and servant of the Indian bourgeoisie.
Led by the Stalinist Communist Party of India (Marxist) [CPM],
the Left Front is seeking to win a seventh-consecutive term as
West Bengals state government by exploiting residual popular
illusions in its claims to be pro-toiler and socialist, even while
pledging to the Indian bourgeoisie that it will press forward
with economic restructuring.
The Left Front has made the pivot of its election campaign
the call for industrializationa euphemism for making West
Bengal a cheap-labor cog in the manufacturing, research and business-processing
operations of Indian and international capital.
The industrialists have realized that the Left Front
government is an investment-friendly government, boasted
West Bengal Chief Minister and CPM Politburo member Bhuddhadeb
Bhattacharjee in a press interview last month. Several industrial
houses have come to Bengal, and more are coming. ... We are engaged
in the task of development within a capitalist structure.
In pursuit of investment, West Bengals Left Front government
has relaxed labor standards and effectively banned strikes in
the states information technology and business-processing
sectors, given the green light to the expropriation of small farmers
so that their lands can be used for private industrial development,
and sought to win the confidence of international-lending agencies
by contracting out public sector jobs and curbing social spending.
In the first four decades following independence, the CPM and
its main Left Front partner, the Communist Party of India, justified
their support for Indias state-led national development
strategy on the grounds that the anti-imperialist
sections of the national bourgeoisie had to be supported against
the pro-imperialist wing and feudal reaction. Now, in an even
cruder perversion of Marxism, the Stalinists claim, citing China
as their model, that the path to socialism lies through West Bengals
transformation into a cheap labor magnet for international capital.
I am trying, said Bhattacharjee, to work
accepting the present reality...[S ]ince we are practical, we
know it is wise to be capitalist at the moment when the whole
world is wooing capitalism.
The Left Front government is particularly concerned at dispelling
the notion of West Bengal as a center of worker militancy. Bhattacharjee
made a point of reporting for work last September 29, when the
unions and Left Front staged a one-day strike to protest the economic
policies of the central government, and he angrily denounced workers
whose protests crippled the operations of Kolkatas IT sector
that day, vowing his government will ensure no like disruption
ever occurs again.
The Left Fronts development model stresses
the need for harmonious relations between management
and labor, Bhattacharjee told a meeting at the Calcutta Press
Club April 13. It is not the managements responsibility
alone to run industry, but labourers should also co-operate so
that disputes are settled through discussions. I cant encourage
militant trade unionism and shut down factories.
Among the Left Front governments main arguments in wooing
investors is that it can better ensure labor peace
than other state governments, because of its close ties to the
trade union apparatus. But when the labor bureaucracy has proven
unable to quell worker militancy, the West Bengal Left Front regime
has not shied away from using police repression, a point Bhattacharjee
himself made when speaking to a business audience in Mumbai last
August. After denouncing those who know only how to formulate
a charter of demands, raise slogans and disturb production,
Bhattacharjee declared, We have acted firmly by calling
in police when the unions turned militant at Bata and a Pepsi
factory.
According to the corporate media, there is strong support for
the Left Front governments re-election in business circles.
An April 26 Reuters report gave the example of a real estate developer,
Pradip Chopra, whose business has grown tenfold in the last five
years. I am comfortable with this government and will support
it, said Chopra. They have changed Kolkatas
image of a dying city to one that is vibrant and a happening place
to invest. Another businessman, Rajat Kandoi, a partner
in a company that does overseas business-processing, told Reuters,
I never dreamed I would vote for the Communists. But this
time, I would like this government to return to power.
A poll conducted by the Indian Chamber of Commerce (ICC), the
results of which were released last month, rated West Bengal the
third most attractive state in which to invest, after Gujarat
and Maharashtra. More than half of the ICCs respondents
termed the Left Front governments performance in respect
to industrialization and the creation of a congenial business
environment good, while 78 percent lauded the measures that
Chief Minster Bhattacharjee has taken to boost business confidence.
The CPM and Left Front leaders themselves admit that they are
courting business support. Jyoti Basu, who served as the West
Bengals chief minister from 1977 to 2001, told a rally,
So far, we have won election on the strength of the poors
vote. Now, we want votes from every stratum of the society.
Left turns right in Bengals biz belt, exclaimed
an April 25 CNN-IBN report. It pointed to Narayan Jain, the Left
Fronts candidate for the Chowringee constituency, as symbolic
of the Lefts growing clout among business leaders
and professionals. His core group of supporters are
all businessmen
Jain, adds the report, pushes an unabashed pro-reform,
pro-business line. His main concern is to make West Bengal safe
for business. The laws which are not relevant today, should
be scrapped. And after the new government comes, we will take
that initiative, he says.
Led by the CPM, the Left Front is also playing a critical role
at the all-India level in supporting the Indian bourgeoisie in
imposing its neo-liberal program of privatization, deregulation,
and the gutting of worker rights and farmer-price supports. The
Left Fronts 60-plus MPs are providing the minority, Congress
Party-led United Progressive Alliance (UPA) coalition with the
votes needed to sustain it in office, while working to contain
the mass opposition to the growth of economic insecurity and social
inequality within the confines of trade union and parliamentary
protests.
In the West Bengal elections, which have been held in five
phases ending today, the Left Front has been opposed by two, rival
multi-party alliances.
The split in the opposition virtually guarantees the Left Front
will be re-elected to an unprecedented seventh-term and is indicative
of the general satisfaction of big business and the ruling elite
with the current government.
The first alliance is led by the Trinamool Congress, a split-off
from the Congress Party of Sonia Gandhi and Prime Minister Manmohan
Singh, and includes the Hindu supremacist Bharatiya Janata Party
(BJP). Although the BJP is the second largest party in Indias
national parliament, it is only a marginal player in West Bengal
politics.
The Trinamool or grassroots Congress (TMC) is led
by Mamata Bannerjee, a populist demagogue who makes Bengali-chauvinist
and strident anti-communist appeals, while trying to exploit popular
anger over some of the anti-worker and anti-poor actions of the
Left Front government. In the late 1990s, Bannerjees TMC
became the focus of an attempt on the part of sections of big
business to oust the Left Front government, which was perceived
as insufficiently supportive of economic restructuring. But her
stock has fallen as the Left Front has moved right and as sections
of West Bengals urban middle class have benefited from the
growth in Indias economy.
The Congress, which heads an eight-party [West Bengal] United
Democratic Alliance, spurned Bannerjees pleas for a mahajot
or grand anti-Left alliance. Sections of the West Bengal Congress
party apparatus were inclined to accept Bannerjees offer,
but the all-India party leadership would not hear of it.
Publicly the Congress justified its refusal to ally with the
TMC on the grounds that Bannerjee would not break her ties with
the BJP and its National Democratic Alliance. Clearly this was
a factor, since any alliance with the BJP would undermine the
Congress posture as a progressive, secular party.
But even more importantly, an electoral alliance with the TMC
would have constituted a threat to the continued existence of
West Bengals Left Front government, which provides the Stalinists
with much of their leverage in official politics. By allowing
the return to power of West Bengals Left Front government
with only token opposition, the Congress leadership has smoothed
the way for retaining the Lefts pivotal support for the
UPA government at the Center.
See Also:
Indian Stalinists take leading role in
New Delhis efforts to contain Nepal crisis
[3 May 2006]
Indian Stalinists reaffirm
support for UPA government
[25 April 2006]
Indian Stalinists
pledge to stamp out further IT work disruptions
[9 November 2005]
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