Kolkata’s political arena heated up Monday as Trinamool Congress fired off a WhatsApp whip to its KMC councillors, enforcing a Bengali-only rule for the ongoing budget session. No Hindi, no English—just the sweet cadence of Bangla.
The timing is no coincidence. With reports of Bengali laborers facing hostility in BJP-governed states, TMC aims to amplify its outrage and tap into linguistic fervor before polls. Chief whip Bappaditya Dasgupta led the charge, imploring party members to embrace Bengali as a symbol of survival.
“Join the struggle to preserve Bengali existence,” he exhorted. “Deliver every budget speech in our mother tongue during KMC sessions.”
This poses a challenge for several ruling party councillors whose first languages are Hindi or Urdu, accustomed to mixing in those during fiscal talks. The whip signals a shift, demanding fluency or preparation in Bengali.
As the annual budget scrutiny looms large, BJP continues its barrage on TMC over corruption claims. The incumbents, however, pivot to cultural defense, spotlighting Bengali heritage to deflect attacks.
“Bengali culture faces assaults nationwide,” Dasgupta remarked. “Bengali speakers in BJP realms suffer persecution. This is the language of Rabindranath Tagore’s Jana Gana Mana and Bankim Chandra’s Vande Mataram.”
Turning protest into policy, he noted, “Oppression has transformed Bengali into our language of defiance. My appeal to councillors follows the mayor’s precedent—her Friday budget address was purely in Bengali. Others must now align.”
Observers view this as a calculated play to galvanize regional pride, potentially marginalizing non-Bengali speakers and intensifying the session’s drama. The budget floor may soon echo with unified Bangla rhetoric, reshaping alliances and arguments in Kolkata’s municipal politics.