NEW DELHI: Days after TMC MPs floated the idea of appointing Mamata Banerjee as the leader of the INDIA bloc, the West Bengal chief minister herself weighed in on Friday, saying she is ready to lead the opposition bloc if asked.
The statement from the CM comes amid simmering disagreements within the INDIA bloc over issues ranging from Congress’s recent electoral defeats in Haryana & Maharashtra to its insistence on debating “one specific issue” in Parliament.
“I formed the INDIA bloc; now it is up to those leading the front to manage it. If they can’t run the show, what can I do?” Banerjee said during a television interview.
“I am not leading that front,” she added.
When asked if she would accept leading the opposition front against the BJP-led NDA government, she responded, “If given the opportunity, I would ensure its smooth functioning.”
‘Mamata Banerjee has a perfect record’
Over the past week, TMC MPs like Kalyan Banerjee and Kirti Azad have urged Congress and other INDIA bloc allies to set aside their egos and recognise Mamata Banerjee as the leader of the opposition alliance. They touted her consistent record of defeating BJP and Prime Minister Narendra Modi in West Bengal.
“Mamata Banerjee has a perfect record. Whenever Narendra Modi has faced defeat, it has always been in West Bengal. Even in the recent by-elections, where the BJP had one seat and we had five, Mamata Didi hit a six and threw Narendra Modi out of the West Bengal boundary,” Kalyan Banerjee asserted.
INDIA bloc and BJP response
Alliance partners within INDIA bloc like Shiv Sena(UBT) have also weighed in on Mamata’s willingness to lead the opposition front, saying that they were aware of Mamata’s opinion and assured that she is an important partner in the INDIA bloc along with other regional leaders like Arvind Kejriwal and Uddhav Thackeray.
“We know this opinion of Mamata ji. We also want her to be a major partner of the INDIA alliance. Whether it is Mamata Banerjee, Arvind Kejriwal or Shiv Sena, we are all together. We will soon go to talk to Mamata Banerjee in Kolkata.”
Speaking on similar lines, Shiv Sena UBT MP Priyanka Chaturvedi acknowledged Mamata Banerjee’s statement and said this proposal would be taken up by senior members of the INDIA bloc members when the group meets next time.
“She has put forward her statement. Because she has shown a successful model in West Bengal where she has kept BJP away from power and implemented good welfare schemes…her election experience, fighting spirit, accordingly she has shared her interest. Whenever INDIA alliance meeting takes place, our senior leaders will together take a decision”.
However, Congress has dismissed the TMC’s proposal, calling it a joke. “That’s a good joke,” Congress leader Manickam Tagore quipped when asked about the suggestion to make Banerjee the leader of the opposition alliance.
Meanwhile, the BJP hit out at the bloc, describing it as nothing more than a group of parties united solely in opposition to PM Modi, with no other common agenda. The BJP also singled out the Congress and Rahul Gandhi, while pointing out to internal race within the bloc.
“Mamata Banerjee’s statement makes it clear that the entire INDI alliance does not have faith in the leadership of Rahul Gandhi This also shows that the INDI alliance leaders have an internal competition with each other,” said BJP spokesperson Pradeep Bhandari on Saturday.
TMC refuses to toe Congress line
At the outset of the winter session of Parliament, the TMC also toed a different line from Congress by opposing constant parliament disruptions over the alleged Adani issue, instead advocating for the smooth functioning of the House. “TMC wants the House to run so that people’s issues can be raised,” TMC leader in the Rajya Sabha Derek O’Brien said last week after din in parliament stalled proceedings.
While Congress demanded a discussion on industrialist Gautam Adani’s alleged involvement in bribery and fraud cases in the US, the TMC, along with allies like the Samajwadi Party wanting to hold the government accountable on issues such as central funding and the crisis in Manipur. The TMC also skipped INDIA bloc meetings at the start of the winter session, where the agenda for the parliament session was discussed.
Despite being members of the INDIA bloc, the relationship between the TMC and Congress has often seen rough patches. From the TMC contesting Lok Sabha elections independently to disagreeing on seat sharing, the differences between the two parties have come up often, and it has intensified after Congress’s losses in Haryana and Maharashtra.