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AAP
Image Credit: IBNS File

Buoyant by Punjab success, AAP to contest Bengal panchayat polls in 2023

| @indiablooms | Mar 15, 2022, at 05:11 pm

Kolkata/IBNS: Not just Gujarat and Himachal Pradesh, Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal's Aam Aadmi Party (AAP), which is widely perceived as a replacement of the Congress to challenge the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) nationally, is aiming to plunge into West Bengal politics in 2023 in the backdrop of its landslide win in Punjab.

"We have already decided to contest the panchayat polls in 2023," a source told India Blooms.

The AAP, which is now the fourth Indian party after the Congress, BJP, CPI-M to rule more than a state (though Delhi is a union territory), has already rebooted its mass outreach campaigns in West Bengal.

Quite similar to how the BJP had started bolstering its campaign a few years ago, the AAP has provided a phone number, a miss call to which will earn one the party's membership.

Besides, the ruling party of Delhi held a couple of marches in Kolkata very recently.

Arvind Kejriwal with Mamata Banerjee in Delhi | Image Credit: UNI

In the Malda district of north Bengal, posters were found on streets supporting Kejriwal and his AAP to enter into West Bengal politics, which is dominated by Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee's Trinamool Congress (TMC) since 2009.

Like Kejriwal in Delhi, Banerjee stormed back to power for the third term in 2021 decimating Prime Minister Narendra Modi's BJP, which is now ridden by its infighting.

Not perturbed by the AAP arrival, West Bengal Minister and TMC veteran, Firhad Hakim, said, "Earlier BJP had tried to capture power here with a different culture. Now AAP has won in Punjab and it wants to keep its footprint here. They are welcome but I don't think it will matter much."

Though the BJP has emerged as the only legitimate Opposition in the assembly with its 77 seats, the saffron camp has already lost a number of key party leaders to the TMC besides getting its vote shares lower than the CPI-M, which ruled the state for 34 years until Banerjee voted them out in 2011, in the recent byelections and civic polls.

Reacting to AAP's emergence, which could further split the Opposition votes in favour of the TMC, West Bengal BJP chief spokesperson Shamik Bhattacharya says, "AAP had disappeared after suddenly emerging in the state politics a few years ago. Now they are again becoming active... BJP is always in favour of multi ideologies which strengthen democracy."

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