Tag: Trinamool Congress

  • Mukul Roy appointed as chief of Public Accounts Committee in Bengal Assembly, BJP stages walkout

    By PTI
    KOLKATA: Senior Trinamool Congress leader Mukul Roy, who recently switched over to the ruling camp in Bengal after winning the assembly polls on a BJP ticket, was on Friday appointed as the chairperson of Public Accounts Committee in the Assembly by Speaker Biman Banerjee.

    BJP MLAs, led by Leader of Opposition Suvendu Adhikari, staged a walkout in the Assembly, protesting against this decision. Roy, officially a BJP MLA from Krishnanagar Uttar, joined the TMC last month. However, he did not resign as an MLA, despite being asked to do so several times by the saffron party.

    The TMC leader was elected as a member of the Public Accounts Committee (PAC) in June. Adhikari said that an opposition MLA is usually appointed as the PAC chairman in accordance with the norm, but the TMC misused that rule to appoint Roy as its chairman.

  • John Barla’s elevation as Union minister proves BJP backs bifurcation of Bengal: Trinamool Congress

    By PTI
    KOLKATA: The Trinamool Congress on Thursday alleged that the elevation of Alipurduar MP John Barla as Union minister proves that the BJP supports the bifurcation of West Bengal, a charge denied by the saffron party.

    Barla, one of the key architects of the BJP’s making of inroads in north Bengal, had recently demanded a separate Union territory by carving out the region from the state. He was inducted into the cabinet of Prime Minister Narendra Modi as the Union Minister of State for Minority Affairs.

    “The decision to elevate John Barla as Union minister proves that the BJP supports his statement regarding the division of West Bengal. The saffron should come out clean on it. He (Barla) is a divisive personality…for last two years, I haven’t seen him being able to speak properly in the Parliament, what sort of minister he will make is anybody’s guess,” TMC leader Sougata Roy said.

    State BJP chief Dilip Ghosh dubbed the TMC’s allegations as baseless and said the party doesn’t support the bifurcation of the state. “We don’t support any division of West Bengal. The party leadership and our prime minister felt that John Barla would make a good minister and can work for the people, so he has been inducted (into the cabinet),” he said.

    While speaking to a Bengali news channel in the morning after taking charge, Barla declined to comment on his previous statement seeking bifurcation of the state. “I don’t want to comment on it. Now, I would like to work for the benefit of the masses. I will work towards the fulfilment of the demands of the people of north Bengal, nobody can suppress the demands of the masses,” he said.

    Barla alleged that the people of West Bengal are not getting benefits of central schemes and as Union minister, he would strive to ensure that people get these benefits. “We want peace to return to West Bengal. The central schemes should be implemented,” he said.

    Apart from Barla, three other MPs from West Bengal — one from north Bengal (Nisith Pramanik) and two from south Bengal (Subhas Sarkar and Shantanu Thakur) — have been inducted into the Union cabinet. Pramanik has been made MoS Home, and Sarkar and Thakur have been made MoS Education, and MoS Ports and Shipping respectively.

  • West Bengal Assembly passes resolution for creation of legislative council

    By PTI
    KOLKATA: The West Bengal Assembly on Tuesday passed a resolution supporting an Ad-hoc committee report that favoured the creation of a legislative council, amid opposition by the BJP.

    The resolution – ‘Consideration of report of the ad hoc committee to examine the recommendation for creation of a Legislative council’ — was moved by state parliamentary affairs minister Partha Chatterjee under Rule 169 of the Procedures of Conduct of Business of the House.

    Voting was duly held, with 196 of the 265 members present in the House supporting the creation of the council and 69 opposing it. The BJP legislative party, while opposing the resolution, said the TMC wants to pursue “backdoor politics” to help party leaders get elected as lawmakers despite having lost the assembly polls.

    The saffron party also argued that the move would put pressure on state exchequer. Echoing the BJP, lone ISF MLA Naushad Siddiqui also opposed the resolution.

  • Abhijit Mukherjee wants to live up to his father Pranab’s legacy in new role in Trinamool Congress

    By PTI
    KOLKATA: Former President Pranab Mukherjee’s son Abhijit Mukherjee who joined the Trinamool Congress of Mamata Banerjee wants to live up to his father’s legacy of secular politics and of binding India through consensual politics.

    Mukherjee, an engineer-turned politician, said he also wants to help work towards re-industrialising eastern India, which he feels can be the trade corridor for the country’s Look East or Act East policy of connecting with East and South East Asia.

    “I have grown up believing in secular and inclusive politics which my father, our then prime minister Indira Gandhi and others of that generation of Congress leaders believed in. I cannot come anywhere near them in stature, but I think it is time those of us who are in public life took a stand and united to support the concept of a secular India,” he told PTI in an interview.

    Mukherjee, a two-time Lok Sabha MP from his father’s pocket borough of Jangipur, said he joined the Mamata Banerjee-led party because she has taken a strong stand on this issue. “The TMC has also worked to have a consensus in national politics which is what my father was known for during his political career and later as President,” he pointed out.

    The stress on secular politics and consensus building seemed like an indirect attack on the BJP, which is often accused by rival political parties of being communal and of ignoring state sensitivities. However, the younger Mukherjee refused to be drawn into a conversation on the subject.

    “I also ideologically believe in the concept of inclusive growth which takes care of the last man standing when we plan economic development and not just the rich industrial barons,” the alumnus of the Jadavpur University said, adding that “these legacy beliefs” are “shared by Mamata-di, who is herself from the same school of thought”.

    Though Pranab Mukherjee, the quincentennial Congress politician, had been Banerjee’s mentor in her early political career, the two had their differences especially when she had sought write offs of a huge debt overhang that Bengal had taken during the Left Front’s rule.

    Nevertheless, political pundits believe they shared a special relationship, which made it easy for the son to walk into the TMC camp. “My father helped former Prime Minister P V Narasimha Rao, whose birth anniversary we recently celebrated, in crafting the Look East policy which this (central) government has now renamed Act East,” said Mukherjee, adding that the policy was thought out to connect India strategically to the growing markets of ASEAN and East Asia.

    “If we want that policy to succeed, we need to re- industrialise Bengal and eastern India and treat it as the fulcrum for a trade corridor to these markets,” he said. Bengal’s and eastern India’s industry has been faltering since the 1970s when a large number of factories shut shop because of economic factors and a Left-inspired wave of strikes.

    “I worked with other top managers in merging IISCO with SAIL and in reviving it by pumping in Rs 16,000 crore, possibly the largest investment in eastern India ever. There is need to work further in that direction and leverage the presence of iron ore, coal and ports to revive engineering industry here. I believe that TMC can do that and perhaps in some ways I can be of help,” said Mukherjee, who served in the public sector SAIL for two-and-a-half decades.

    IISCO which had been started by Sir RN Mookerjee more than 100 years back in Bengal, had rivalled Tata Steel in its days. After nationalization in the 1970s, it had turned into a white elephant after its plant became outdated.

    However, an effort to revive it by building Asia’s largest blast furnace and ancillary plants seems to have paid off and is expected to create a fillip by way of downstream industries in the Durgapur-Asansol industrial belt and upstream industries in Jharkhand.

    Speaking of plans apart from politics, Mukherjee said he wanted to float a think tank in his fathers name which would work in rural areas and in fostering better relations with neighbouring countries. “My father along with other leaders worked towards the good relations we now have with Bangladesh, whose 50 years are being celebrated this year,” he said.

    He took pains in building the Zaranj highway in Afghanistan, in re-starting relations with Myanmar. “These are areas this think tank could work on along with issues like rural education which was close to his heart,” the newly minted TMC politician said.

  • Half of BJP MLAs want to be with TMC: Saugata Roy

    By Express News Service
    KOLKATA:  The Trinamool Congress claimed half of the BJP’s MLAs are in touch with its leadership and a decision on whether all of them will be inducted is yet to be taken. The party also said it was not happy with the Calcutta High Court’s recent order observing that the state government is in denial mode on the issue of post-poll violence.

    “More than half of BJP’s newly elected MLAs are in touch with our party, expressing their willingness to join. The party is yet to take a stand on this issue. It is the chief minister who will take the final decision,’’ said TMC MP and spokesperson Saugata Roy.

    Ever since her stupendous victory in the Assembly elections, TMC chief Mamata Banerjee has opened the door only for Mukul Roy. Many BJP MLAs, who had defected from the TMC, said they were not happy with the saffron camp’s political narrative.

    Former minister Rajib Banerjee, who joined the BJP ahead of the elections, said he was not happy with the party’s divisive politics. Roy also said the party was not happy with the Calcutta High Court’s observation on post-poll violence. “The observation and order was given by a bench of five judges which include acting chief justice Rajesh Bindal. We wrote to the Chief Justice of India seeking removal of Bindal.”

    ALSO READ | No bypoll? Mamata Banerjee has a workaround, says Trinamool

    Last month, TMC MLA and  Bar Council of West Bengal chairperson Ashok Kumar Deb had alleged that Bindal was biased in the hearing of some prominent cases. Condemning the HC order engaging the National Human Rights Commission to submit a report, Roy said there was no need to engage the NHRC. “Such order is suitable when there is no government. We have a stable government and the state has its own human rights commission.” 

  • No bypoll? Mamata Banerjee has a workaround, says Trinamool

    Express News Service
    KOLKATA:  Amid allegations that the entire Uttarakhand drama was directed at denying West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee an opportunity of getting elected in a bypoll citing the ongoing pandemic, the Trinamool on Sunday appeared unfazed.

    “If the bypoll is not conducted, she will resign two days before the stipulated time of six months ends and take oath as chief minister again after two days,” said party MP and spokesperson Saugata Roy. Mamata narrowly lost in Nandigram, which is why she has to get elected to the Assembly within six months of assuming office.

    That deadline ends on November 5. Another option is the revival of the state Legislative Council, which was decided during her first cabinet meet after being sworn in as CM for the third time. She could take that route like Uddhav Thackeray did in Maharashtra without fighting a by-election. But there is a catch. ‘’The proposal to revive the Vidhan Parishad has to be approved by Parliament.

    Since BJP has majority in Parliament, we will wait for approval. Bengal had a Legislative Council since Independence, so there should not be any issue in its revival,’’ said Roy. The Upper House was abolished in Bengal after the United Front government came to power in 1969.

    In Uttarakhand, when Tirath Singh Rawat resigned as chief minister saying by-elections could not be held within six months of his taking oath of office due to the Covid pandemic, the Congress alleged that the real aim was to stop Mamata from getting elected as an MLA and compel her to step down.

  • Trinamool Congress leaders slam PM Modi over soaring fuel prices

    By PTI
    KOLKATA: The Trinamool Congress on Sunday slammed Prime Minister Narendra Modi for soaring fuel prices, wondering whether he has “gone into hiding”.

    The ruling party in West Bengal also accused the BJP of working hard to “add to the people’s woes” as the fuel prices hit a “historic high”.

    However, the BJP questioned why the state government is not reducing its duties on petroleum products to bring down the prices.

    “As fuel prices hit a HISTORIC HIGH, @BJP4India govt (government) seems to be working very hard towards adding to the woes of the public.

    Not much has changed from 2020.

    The same old blame game continues while the demands of the people of India are conveniently ignored!,” Trinamool Congress national general secretary and Lok Sabha MP Abhishek Banerjee tweeted.

    Petrol price has crossed the Rs 100-mark per litre in metro cities of Mumbai, Chennai, Bengaluru, Hyderabad and Pune and it is over Rs 99 in Delhi and Kolkata.

    Taking to Twitter, senior state minister Partha Chatterjee said, “Mr @narendramodi has a penchant for drama every time the people of India are in distress!” “Now with the skyrocketing petrol prices, why has he gone into hiding? Preparing for a big lie-laden speech Mr Prime Minister,” the state industry minister alleged.

    Fuel prices differ from state to state depending on the incidence of local taxes such as value-added tax (VAT) and freight charges.

    And for this reason, price of petrol has breached the Rs 100-mark per litre in Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, Karnataka, Jammu and Kashmir, Odisha, Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Bihar, Punjab and Ladakh.

    “Around June 2020, I remember petrol prices were being hiked for nearly 17 days at a stretch! Within a year, we’ve crossed Rs 100 in several cities across India.

    Shri @narendramodi kindly get off your high horse & take cognizance of the woes of your people!” Bengal transport minister Firhad Hakim said on the micro-blogging site.

    The Left parties also staged protests in various parts of the state against the rising fuel prices and cooking gas.

    West Bengal BJP leader Samik Bhattacharya said criticism will not solve the problem.

    “Why isn’t the state government reducing its levies? Everyone knows how the Centre is managing the current crisis.

    A joint effort from the central government and the states is required to address the issue,” he said.

    He called for the inclusion of petro products under the GST regime.

     

  • Hawala case gives ammo to Trinamool Congress in Bengal

    By Express News Service
    KOLKATA: The Governor-West Bengal government conflict hit a new low on Thursday. Trinamool Congress saw “mystery’’ behind the death of Surendra Kumar Jain, a key accused in the Jain hawala case, two days after CM Mamata Banerjee branded Governor Jagdeep Dhankhar a “corrupt man,’’ claiming his name was mentioned in hawala charge sheet. 

    “The main accused died. Now the question is — is this death normal or is there something else behind it? It should be investigated. The name Dhankar is linked with the incident involving the protection of the country, the protection of the people. Is this man the Governor of Bengal? Our Governor is still not giving any answer,’’ asked TMC Rajya Sabha MP Sukhendu Sekhar Roy.

    The hawala shadow of the 90s cast its shadow on the Bengal politics after Mamata hit out at the Governor shortly after his north Bengal visit. Incidentally, after the arrest of Hizbul militant Ashfaq Hussain Lone from Kashmir in 1991, it was learnt that the fund came into the account of the terrorist outfit through hawala and the money came through a businessman identified as Surendra Kumar Jain.

    During searches, two diaries and two notebooks of Jains were recovered. The documents revealed a list of recipients mentioning a name, Dhankhar. The same day, the TMC released a picture of Arvind Vaidya, the security guard of a fake IAS officer, who was arrested for running a fake vaccination camp. “In this picture, Vaidya is seen with Dhankhar.

    Gifts and envelopes were delivered to the palace (Raj Bhavan) through the security guard,’’ Roy alleged.In his response on the day Mamata attacked him, Dhankhar said her allegation came minutes after he asked her to make changes in the draft of his Assembly speech to be delivered on July 2.

    Post-poll violence: SC notice to Centre, BengalThe Supreme Court on Thursday issued notice on a plea seeking for an inquiry into the post-poll violence in Bengal. A bench headed by Justice Vineet Saran issued notice to the Centre, Bengal, and the EC. The plea submits that thousands of residents are being terrorised, penalized and tortured by workers of the Trinamool for supporting the BJP. The plea submits that TMC supporters and workers started creating chaos, unrest and set the house and properties of Hindus on fire for supporting BJP.

  • Centre withdraws Z-category VIP security cover of turncoat MLA Mukul Roy

    By PTI
    NEW DELHI: The Z-category VIP security cover of West Bengal politician and MLA Mukul Roy, who recently re-joined the Trinamool Congress (TMC) after a brief stint with the BJP, has been withdrawn, official sources said on Thursday.

    They said the Union Home Ministry has directed the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) to recall its detachment deployed with the 67-year-old Roy. Roy had last week joined West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee-led TMC along with his son Subhrangshu in Kolkata.

    Sources said Roy, who won the assembly election as a BJP candidate from Krishnanagar Uttar constituency, had written to the Centre to withdraw the security cover, which has now been given effect to. Roy had quit the TMC after being removed from the post of the party’s national general secretary.

    He had joined the BJP in November, 2017, and was made the party’s national vice president. Soon after, he was accorded a low category Y+ central security cover of the central paramilitary CRPF which was upgraded to the second top level of Z just before the assembly polls in the state that were held in March-April this year.

    He had a contingent of about 22-24 armed CRPF commandos who used to move with him every time he travelled in West Bengal. Sources said the small category security cover being provided to Subhrangshu by another central paramilitary force CISF has also been withdrawn.

    The father-son are now being provided security by the state police.

  • Return of turncoats sparks uneasiness in Trinamool Congress also

    Express News Service
    KOLKATA: Mukul Roy’s ghar wapsi has sparked concerns not only in the BJP but also in West Bengal’s ruling Trinamool Congress. The worry in the BJP camp is over the possibility of more Trinamool Congress turncoats in the party following Roy’s footsteps.

    Meanwhile, the return of Roy and the possibility of others following him have caused unease among a section of TMC workers who are opposed to the induction of “traitors” who attacked the party while campaigning for the recent Assembly elections. 

    Concerns have mounted after former Trinamool Congress minister Rajib Banerjee, who is now in the saffron camp, held talks with TMC spokesperson Kunal Ghosh on Saturday. “Now he (Rajib) is criticising BJP for its divisive politics. But before the election, he organised a rally comprising Hindu hardliners and used the Election Commission against TMC workers in Domjur. He visited Kunal’s house but it doesn’t mean that he washed all his sins by taking a holy dip in the Ganges,” said Serampore Kalyan Banerjee, a TMC MP. Rajib contested from Domjur constituency for the BJP, but failed to win.

    There is also strong buzz that former TMC MLA Sabyasachi Dutta, who joined the BJP, is set to follow his mentor Roy into the party. It was Roy, who is known for his ability to poach functionaries from rival camps, who brought Dutta to the saffron party.

    Some in the TMC have already raised their voice against Dutta’s possible induction. TMC minister Sujit Bose is one of them. “The party will take the decision. But if the leadership wants to know my opinion, I will let them know my stance on his return,” said Dutta.

    Even when Dutta was in the TMC, a rift between him and Bose had surfaced on many occasions. While campaigning for the election, Dutta had aggressively attacked Bose. Not just Dutta and Rajib, at least eight MLAs and an MP from north Bengal are expected to jump ship to the Trinamool Conrgess as an after-effect of Roy’s return to his old battle-pitch.