Articles features
Once its stronghold, Congress steadily losing ground in northeast (News Analysis)
Agartala, June 14
For a party which once dominated the political landscape in India's northeast, the Congress is today struggling to survive in the sprawling region, comprising eight states.
The defection of six Congress legislators in Tripura to the Trinamool Congress -- which has reduced the party to the third spot in the state assembly -- is the latest jolt the country's oldest party has suffered in the northeast.
Only last month, the Congress lost political control of Assam, the biggest state in the region, to the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), which is confident of expanding its wings in the region -- in contrast to the feeble future the Congress stares at.
"Organisational weakness and lack of leadership have seen the Congress in a bad shape in the northeastern states including Tripura," political analyst and writer Sanjib Deb told IANS.
"After the BJP captured power for the first time in Assam, keeping this victory as a milestone, the party is in a jubilant mood in all the eight northeastern states and aims to step up its activities in the region," Deb told IANS.
Earlier, in mid-February, the Congress government was toppled in Arunachal Pradesh. Rebel Congress legislator Kalikho Pul ousted Nabam Tuki to became Chief Minister with the support of 31 MLAs, including 18 dissident Congress members, 11 of the BJP and two independents.
Fearing a similar rebellion, Meghalaya Chief Minister Mukul Sangma reportedly wrote to Congress President Sonia Gandhi and Vice President Rahul Gandhi warning against "black sheep" in the state unit who are apparently in touch with BJP leaders.
And, after Tripura, it was the BJP's turn to gave a political blow to the Congress in its Manipur bastion.
In the June 2 elections to the politically important Imphal Municipal Corporation the Congress won 15 of the 27 seats and the BJP 10, while ndependents won two seats. The BJP has just one councillor in the outgoing Congress-led corporation.
In northeast India today, Assam is ruled by the BJP, Tripura by the CPI-M dominated Left Front, Sikkim by the Sikkim Democratic Front, Nagaland by the Naga People's Front-led Democratic Alliance of Nagaland and Arunachal by a rebel Congress and BJP coalition while the Congress rules the remaining three states -- Manipur, Meghalaya and Mizoram.
Just six months ago, the Congress was in the saddle in five northeastern states -- Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Manipur, Meghalaya and Mizoram.
With a population of 45.58 million, the northeast accounts for 25 Lok Sabha seats and 498 assembly seats.
Of the 25 seats, the BJP and its allies got 10 in the 2014 Lok Sabha polls, the Congress secured eight seats. In the 2009 polls, the Congress and its allies had held 14 seats, while the BJP and its allies managed to win six.
Of the BJP's eight Lok Sabha members from the northeast, seven are from Assam and one from Arunachal Pradesh.
Muslim leader and industrialist Badruddin Ajmal's All India United Democratic Front has three Lok Sabha members from Assam, Communist Party of India-Marxist (CPI-M) has two in Tripura while National People's Party (NPP) in Meghalaya, Naga People's Front (NPF) and Sikkim Democratic Front have one seats each.
The NPP, founded by late parliamentarian and former Lok Sabha speaker P.A. Sangma and Nagaland's NPF are partners of the BJP.
The electoral alliance between the Left Front led by CPI-M and the Congress for the West Bengal assembly polls had badly hit Tripura's key opposition, the Congress, vertically splitting its legislature group.
According to political analyst Sekhar Datta, the Congress seems to be well on course to "political irrelevance" in its once most-poweful domain -- the northeastern region.
"The debacle in the 2014 Lok Sabha polls and the series of political initiatives taken by the BJP have led to the Congress yielding ground in major portions of the region," Datta said.
The Congress was the preferred political choice among the people of the region since independence and through the creation of a host of separate states, he said.
"There was a time when the people of the northeast, especially the vast multitude of tribals, could connect with the Nehrus and Gandhis -- Jawaharlal, Indira and Rajiv -- but that has been lost. Rahul Gandhi and Sonia Gandhi have never really been able to step into the shoes of their ancestors," Datta, also a renowned writer, concluded.
(Sujit Chakraborty can be contacted at sujit.c@ians.in)
The defection of six Congress legislators in Tripura to the Trinamool Congress -- which has reduced the party to the third spot in the state assembly -- is the latest jolt the country's oldest party has suffered in the northeast.
Only last month, the Congress lost political control of Assam, the biggest state in the region, to the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), which is confident of expanding its wings in the region -- in contrast to the feeble future the Congress stares at.
"Organisational weakness and lack of leadership have seen the Congress in a bad shape in the northeastern states including Tripura," political analyst and writer Sanjib Deb told IANS.
"After the BJP captured power for the first time in Assam, keeping this victory as a milestone, the party is in a jubilant mood in all the eight northeastern states and aims to step up its activities in the region," Deb told IANS.
Earlier, in mid-February, the Congress government was toppled in Arunachal Pradesh. Rebel Congress legislator Kalikho Pul ousted Nabam Tuki to became Chief Minister with the support of 31 MLAs, including 18 dissident Congress members, 11 of the BJP and two independents.
Fearing a similar rebellion, Meghalaya Chief Minister Mukul Sangma reportedly wrote to Congress President Sonia Gandhi and Vice President Rahul Gandhi warning against "black sheep" in the state unit who are apparently in touch with BJP leaders.
And, after Tripura, it was the BJP's turn to gave a political blow to the Congress in its Manipur bastion.
In the June 2 elections to the politically important Imphal Municipal Corporation the Congress won 15 of the 27 seats and the BJP 10, while ndependents won two seats. The BJP has just one councillor in the outgoing Congress-led corporation.
In northeast India today, Assam is ruled by the BJP, Tripura by the CPI-M dominated Left Front, Sikkim by the Sikkim Democratic Front, Nagaland by the Naga People's Front-led Democratic Alliance of Nagaland and Arunachal by a rebel Congress and BJP coalition while the Congress rules the remaining three states -- Manipur, Meghalaya and Mizoram.
Just six months ago, the Congress was in the saddle in five northeastern states -- Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Manipur, Meghalaya and Mizoram.
With a population of 45.58 million, the northeast accounts for 25 Lok Sabha seats and 498 assembly seats.
Of the 25 seats, the BJP and its allies got 10 in the 2014 Lok Sabha polls, the Congress secured eight seats. In the 2009 polls, the Congress and its allies had held 14 seats, while the BJP and its allies managed to win six.
Of the BJP's eight Lok Sabha members from the northeast, seven are from Assam and one from Arunachal Pradesh.
Muslim leader and industrialist Badruddin Ajmal's All India United Democratic Front has three Lok Sabha members from Assam, Communist Party of India-Marxist (CPI-M) has two in Tripura while National People's Party (NPP) in Meghalaya, Naga People's Front (NPF) and Sikkim Democratic Front have one seats each.
The NPP, founded by late parliamentarian and former Lok Sabha speaker P.A. Sangma and Nagaland's NPF are partners of the BJP.
The electoral alliance between the Left Front led by CPI-M and the Congress for the West Bengal assembly polls had badly hit Tripura's key opposition, the Congress, vertically splitting its legislature group.
According to political analyst Sekhar Datta, the Congress seems to be well on course to "political irrelevance" in its once most-poweful domain -- the northeastern region.
"The debacle in the 2014 Lok Sabha polls and the series of political initiatives taken by the BJP have led to the Congress yielding ground in major portions of the region," Datta said.
The Congress was the preferred political choice among the people of the region since independence and through the creation of a host of separate states, he said.
"There was a time when the people of the northeast, especially the vast multitude of tribals, could connect with the Nehrus and Gandhis -- Jawaharlal, Indira and Rajiv -- but that has been lost. Rahul Gandhi and Sonia Gandhi have never really been able to step into the shoes of their ancestors," Datta, also a renowned writer, concluded.
(Sujit Chakraborty can be contacted at sujit.c@ians.in)
1 minute ago
India and Vietnam discuss ways to enhance defence, shipbuilding cooperation
2 minutes ago
EAM Jaishankar holds talks with US Secretary of State Rubio in Canada
6 hours ago
TN CM Stalin congratulates Art director Thota Tharani for Chevalier Award
6 hours ago
Farah Khan takes a dig at friend Juhi Chawla on her birthday
6 hours ago
Krystle D’Souza opens up on her character’s growth in ‘First Copy 2’
6 hours ago
Florence Pugh suffered 6 months of depression after ‘Midsommar’
6 hours ago
Shilpa Shetty relives her ‘Baazigar’ memories with Shah Rukh Khan as film completes 32 years
6 hours ago
Sayani Gupta reveals why rat was her spirit animal in ‘Delhi Crime 3’
6 hours ago
Trailer of Allari Naresh’s horror-thriller ‘12A Railway Colony’ packs a punch!
6 hours ago
Dharmendra has gone home fully satisfied and is in a stable condition, reveals doctor from Breach Candy Hospital
6 hours ago
Parakamani theft case: SIT continues questioning ex-Andhra Police officers
6 hours ago
Bihar gears up for counting on Nov 14; three-tier security in place at 46 centres
6 hours ago
Tirupati laddu row: Former TTD EO appears before SIT for second day
