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This is an archive article published on August 19, 1999

CPI adopting ideology of convenience’ — FB

NEW DELHI, AUG 18: While the Communist Party of India (CPI) on Tuesday decided to play follow the leader by adopting a position identical...

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NEW DELHI, AUG 18: While the Communist Party of India (CPI) on Tuesday decided to play follow the leader by adopting a position identical to that of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) of going soft on the Congress, the smaller Left party, All India Forward Bloc (FB) lashed out at its two big brothers for their ideology of convenience.

Releasing his party’s manifesto, CPI General Secretary A B Bardhan said the thrust of the CPI was to fight the forces of communalism as represented by the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and its fundamentalist allies. The CPI viewed the BJP as the greatest threat to the country’s secular polity and would strengthen the hands of any party that was opposed to the BJP and its allies.

Decrying the policy of equidistance from the BJP and the Congress, which the Left parties had espoused till recently, Bardhan said equidistance is not a sustainable policy. Viewing the BJP and the Congress as twin equal dangers tended to underestimate the threat of communalism and to ignore the ground reality posed by the rise of communal forces.

He described his party’s agenda for the forthcoming elections as defeating the BJP and its allies, increasing the Left presence in the 13th Lok Sabha, and ensuring the success of other democratic and secular parties to prepare the ground for the formation of a Third Front as a viable national alternative.

The CPI was opposed to the BJP-led National Democratic Alliance’s (NDA) proposal for a fixed five-year term for government to ensure political stability. “Political stability can only result from stable government’s. It cannot be imposed by a five-year term,” Bardhan said.

Attacking the policies adopted by the BJP in their 17-months in office, Bardhan said the CPI would oppose the opening up of the financial sector. In the garb of Swadeshi, the BJP was carrying on its policy of gifting away the family silver, in this case the public sector undertakings to multinational corporations, under the dictates of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank.

Brushing away the fact that the four Left parties are having separate election manifestos this time, Bardhan said there were not many differences between the CPI and the CPI (M). The differences were with the two smaller Left partners, the Revolutionary Socialist Party (RSP) and the FB. However, the FB and RSP were small parties, “not sufficiently big to affect left unity where it matters, in West bengal, Kerala or Tripura,” he said.

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The Forward Bloc’s attack on the two dominating Left parties was that they had forged “unethical political alliances with so-called secular parties.”

Clearly sticking to the policy of equidistance, the Forward Bloc said it would fight both the BJP and the Congress in the coming polls.

“Lack of coordination among Left parties in various states, unethical political alliances at regional level and more inclination to the so-called secular parties … are the main reasons behind the dismal performance of the Left parties", the FB manifesto said.

FB General Secretary Debabrata Biswas said there was was real difference between the BJP and the Congress. If the BJP was openly communal, the Congress was blatantly compromising with communalism. Both were equally harmful to the nation and society, he added.

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The FB has trained its guns on the CPI and the CPI (M) accusing them of “bungling under pressure after the fall of Vajpayee government and aligning with the foe against whom we fought for decades.”

 

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