Opposition promise of unity not visible in LS polls

IANS  |  New Delhi 

Rahul Gandhi's decision to also contest from Left-ruled apart from has created further fissures in the opposition ranks ahead of the first phase of elections on April 11.

While there were suggestions earlier of opposition parties fielding common candidates against the BJP-led National Democratic Alliance, the idea has mostly failed to materialize.

In some states, opposition parties are fighting the and also among themselves.

Gandhi's decision to pick the Wayanad constituency in has drawn strong reactions from the Left. CPI-M leader said the had "lost the plot" by deciding to contest against the Left instead of the BJP.

is now the only state where the Congress' main opponent is the Left. Gandhi's decision to also be a candidate in Kerala has invited scorn from the BJP, which is determined to defeat the in in

The Congress is also battling the stridently anti-and also the increasingly also-ran Left in The Congress and the Left failed to shake hands in the state that was once a Left bastion.

And in Delhi, the Congress and the (AAP) could not shed their antagonism and jointly take on the BJP for the city's seven seats.

The Congress has, however, sewed up alliances in with the RJD and smaller parties, with the in Maharashtra, with the Mukti Morcha and others in Jharkhand, with the DMK in Tamil Nadu, with the Janata Dal-Secular in and with the National Conference in

In Jammu and Kashmir, however, the Congress and the National Conference will be engaged in "friendly contests" on two seats in the

But while the NCP is a friend in Maharashtra, it will contest all the seats in Gujarat, a decision likely to queer the pitch for the Congress.

The worst is the story. The Congress is contesting all 80 Lok Sabha seats largely on its own and in the process taking on both the BJP as well as the SP-BSP-RLD combine -- something that has angered BSP more than anyone else.

The Congress made the move after the and divided mostly among themselves, leaving only two seats -- and -- for the Congress.

The Congress and the had joined hands for the Assembly polls in Telangana but are now fighting the Assembly and Lok Sabha elections separately in

Subrata Mukherjee, who taught at University, said that "much better performance was expected" from the opposition on forging alliances.

"The election is much more important for the Congress than it is for the BJP as it has to present itself as a viable alternative. The BJP has shown better skills at political accommodation. They (opposition) should have sorted out the alliances six months earlier," Mukherjee told IANS.

Like most political pundits, he felt that while the opposition parties may be interested in protecting their own turfs, there should have been "better give and take" to present a united picture vis-a-vis the BJP.

(can be reached at prashant.s@ians.in)

--IANS

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First Published: Tue, April 02 2019. 18:40 IST