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People listened to call for change: Left

Mediapersons outnumbered CPI(M) supporters and leaders on Friday at Muzaffar Ahmad Bhawan, the CPI(M) headquarters at Kolkata’s Alimuddin Street. Tanmay Chatterjee reports.

Updated on: May 13, 2011 11:23 PM IST
Hindustan Times | By , Kolkata
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Mediapersons outnumbered CPI(M) supporters and leaders on Friday at Muzaffar Ahmad Bhawan, the CPI(M) headquarters at Kolkata’s Alimuddin Street.

HT Image
HT Image

Outgoing chief minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee, who was there from 10am to 1.30pm, did not speak to the media. A combative Left Front chairman Biman Bose – who had lashed out at the media and claimed the Left would win comfortably, a day before the results – looked grim and visibly irritated on Friday.

“The Left was not born only to win elections,” he said. “We will continue to oppose the anti-people policies of the Centre.” He said his party could not “read the mind” of the electorate.

“The result was unexpected to us,” he said, adding that the people of West Bengal had responded to Trinamool’s “call for change”.

“We accept our defeat,” he said. “We accept our failure to gauge ground realities.”

When asked if he or his party would congratulate Trinamool chief Mamata Banerjee, Bose said: “In a democratic set up, one doesn’t offer condolence messages to the defeated – nor do you dance in joy for the victors.” He added, “Our calculations were wrong. We will sit and analyse the results.”

There were some tense moments at around 4.45 pm when a group of ecstatic Trinamool supporters – their faces painted green and party flags firmly in hand – passed the CPI(M) headquarters on motorcycles, a reminder, if one was needed, that the power centre in West Bengal had moved away from Alimuddin Street.

 
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Tanmay Chatterjee

Tanmay Chatterjee has spent more than three decades covering regional and national politics, internal security, intelligence, defence and corruption. He also plans and edits special features on subjects ranging from elections to festivals.

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