Bengal unit, which backs Yechury’s line of a poll pact with Congress, is asking for a secret ballot although there is no precedent for it in the party.
The question whether there should be any poll pact with Congress created a sharp divide between general secretary Sitaram Yechury and his predecessor Prakash Karat.
Communism has been dying in Maharashtra for decades, but the energy of the farmers’ protest has breathed new life into the Reds. Can they capitalise on this?
While the protest was largely made up of farmers from Nashik, Thane, Palghar & Ahmednagar, a number of them from other districts joined in on the last 2 days.
A word of advice to friends in the Left movement, or whatever is left of it. The Communist party in Russia is looking for non-Communist icons to rebuild the country.
The reach and impact of influencers are so significant that even politicians such as Prime Minister Narendra Modi have recognised their value—the National Creators Award is proof.
Economists say there are weaknesses in India’s GDP data. But statisticians claim the accusations are based on flawed understanding, saying while GDP has problems, the economists are looking in the wrong places.
Both the governments expressed their commitment to strengthening their maritime cooperation to strengthen the maritime safety and security framework in the region.
1. My view is that ordinary citizens are least concerned about party’s political resolution but they are certainly interested in party’s stand on different political issues. From their point of view, particularly from point of view of those who may have some sympathy for CPI(M) as a political party, question that needs to be asked is how relevant are CPI(m)’s policies today? One cannot forget that the party has been rejected by voters in West Bengal (WB) in two consecutive elections and recently in Tripura. Has it learnt any lesson? 2. Here, let us not forget that in WB the leftists were in power for almost three decades but still their govt. was overthrown. WB remained an industrially backward state. Trinamool Congress saw an opportunity in West Bengal to expose hollowness of leftists’ ideology. In Tripura BJP’s rightist ideology succeeded in exposing leftists’ ideology. 3. Hence my question today is this: Would CPI(M) leaders do a critical self-examination now that it is losing its voters everywhere? Also, I also think that such self-examination, without reconsideration of CPM’s basic economic agenda, would be of little assistance in today’s electoral politics.
1. My view is that ordinary citizens are least concerned about party’s political resolution but they are certainly interested in party’s stand on different political issues. From their point of view, particularly from point of view of those who may have some sympathy for CPI(M) as a political party, question that needs to be asked is how relevant are CPI(m)’s policies today? One cannot forget that the party has been rejected by voters in West Bengal (WB) in two consecutive elections and recently in Tripura. Has it learnt any lesson? 2. Here, let us not forget that in WB the leftists were in power for almost three decades but still their govt. was overthrown. WB remained an industrially backward state. Trinamool Congress saw an opportunity in West Bengal to expose hollowness of leftists’ ideology. In Tripura BJP’s rightist ideology succeeded in exposing leftists’ ideology. 3. Hence my question today is this: Would CPI(M) leaders do a critical self-examination now that it is losing its voters everywhere? Also, I also think that such self-examination, without reconsideration of CPM’s basic economic agenda, would be of little assistance in today’s electoral politics.