With a cutting remark, Bengal’s Congress chief Adhir Ranjan Chowdhury put it bitingly that he wouldn’t vouch for an individual who aimed at extirpating the entire existence of the party and himself in West Bengal politics.
Tadiya’s utterances followed closely on the heels of a rebuke by Congress President Mallikarjun Kharge, who argued that Chowdhury had no power to decide on a possible alliance leadership structure.
“There is no reason to serve a grudge but I keep on a question of her political integrity,”
Chowdhury said, explaining his point of view on the Bengal CM. Gupta alleged that Banerjee had engaged Maoists at the initial stage for her left agenda and then killed them later.
Kharge disagreed with Choudhary’s comments against Banerjee at the press conference in Mumbai, which was attended by Shiv Sena( UBT) President Uddhav Thackeray and Sharad Pawar of the NCP(SP) party.
“Mamata Banerjee is an alliance with us.” She has pointed out that she will come and work with the government. Adhir Ranjan Chowdhury, of course, will come. The decision is both mine and with the high command, and if one does not agree then he will have to go out’ is what Kharge must have said.
The Trinamool Congress (TMC) now fights back with the party spokesperson, Kunal Ghosh, arguing that if Mr. Kharge had given a clarification much earlier and rebutted Mr. Chowdhury when the election atmosphere was much stronger, the country could have been a different place now.
While the Congress Party of Bengal and the Trinamool Congress Party fight over the matter, they are also trying their best to compete for political supremacy in the state. The Lok Sabha elections have become an immediate battlefield in this long-term conflict.