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Failure of the Left

Last Updated 29 July 2010, 17:36 IST

One interpretation of the Cultural Revolution in China that happened four decades ago, evokes some justification for it. Mao Tse-tung wanted his partymen and bureaucrats to go to the villages and stay there. His intention was that they should imbibe the rigours of living in the countryside so that they would not be complacent when they returned to their chair.

The communists’ rout in Kolkata’s recent civic elections should renew Mao’s thoughts. CPI leader A B Bardhan has attacked the communist government in West Bengal for becoming ‘swollen headed’ because of its distance from the ground realities and people’s aspirations.

Indeed, a government which has ruled for 33 years and had all the time to experiment with the communist way of administration, is either inept or incapable to rule. The growing conviction is that a communist state does not fit into today’s world of free thinking and pragmatic working.

The communists in Bengal did not do badly and remained popular, particularly in rural areas, as long as they were effecting agrarian reforms, transferring power to the panchayats and making the countryside feel that it was the master of its destiny. Both the communist cadres and those in power then sat back as if they had nothing more to do. They became slaves to their chairs.

People were exasperated over the status quo and expressed their resentment by defeating communist candidates in byelections. Still, the communists did not get the message. The people became more expressive when they voted against the communists in the last Lok Sabha election and reduced the Left’s strength in the country from 59 to 24.

The party’s politburo considered the defeat an aberration and did not anticipate the mood of the people when chief minister Buddhadev Bhattacharya announced that the industrial development had to have priority if economic conditions were to improve in the state. He said that falling living standards and growing youth unemployment could not be tackled without industrialisation. This was a departure from the communist policy which was primarily based on agrarian reforms. Most ministers, much less the cadre, did not understand or appreciate the new policy.

Even the calculation of the top communist leaders was wrong. How could West Bengal attract industrialists when their cadre had driven them out two decades ago, after humiliating them? The communist cadres had organised hartals and committed daylight crimes which went unpunished because of an indulgent police. Big industrial houses which had their headquarters in Kolkata eventually moved out.

Force on farmers

And when Buddhadev wanted to bring back the industry and began with the Tata’s Nano car plant at Singur through land acquisition, he failed because he had not prepared the ground. When the communist cadres, with the help of the police, tried to fight the farmers who were not willing to give their land for industry, they became oppressors. The West Bengal government committed atrocities to the horror of liberals and failed to make any headway.

The Left did not understand — and it does not do so even now — that the support won through the betterment of villages could not be diverted to the industry in which farmers would have no equity. Farmers could not be expected to hand over their land for cash which would not last them for life.

The government should have realised that the land acquired for an industry did not come under the purview of ‘public interest.’ How could the Left create something akin to special economic zone when it had vehemently opposed to the Union government’s decision to have such exclusive estates?

The reason why the Indian Maoists have spread to nearly 200 districts is not because they use force but because they pay special attention to the development of the countryside where the tribals and the marginalised live. They have not made industry their priority and have apparently stayed with the agrarian needs.

The administration in Kolkata appears at the beck and call of the communist leaders who throw their weight around for personal ends. The Left should also try to find out why they are not selling as they did in the past. One reason, of course, is the lessening of liberal appeal in the glittering world of consumerism. But another reason is that the communist ideology has got jaded.

The 21st century has different challenges, different calls and different compulsions. What strings different endeavours together is the fight against bigotry on the one hand and vested interests on the other. The Left should understand that this battle cannot be won until the people’s say is strengthened. Any kind of dictatorship, either of the proletariat or of others, is bound to fail. The communist ideology has to be reinterpreted.

When West Bengal is introspecting over the causes of its unpopularity in the state, it should be considering how to build an agrarian society which can increase the output, enhance farmers’ income and bring about egalitarianism. This cannot be done through the steps where the land is acquired in ‘public interest’ to benefit a few industrialists. The communist ideology should be radiating with fresh thinking for retrieving idealism which is receding into the shadows.

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(Published 29 July 2010, 17:36 IST)

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