Skip to main content

Mamata playing tired old game, voluble counter-aggression, which has 'no relevance' in Modi era

By Ajit Sahi*
West Bengal chief minister Mamata Banerjee is headed towards failure in her pitched battle against Prime Minister Narendra Modi. There is no stopping Modi’s aggressive, no-holds-barred political play. And Mamata has neither a strategy nor any tactics to fend it off.
Worse for her, she’s playing the tired old game — voluble counter-aggression — which has no relevance in the Modi era. Modi’s remarkable and ruthless political cunning — and I do not use the term negatively — will smash her out the park.
To be fair to Mamata, the situation is unprecedented.
It is true that strong political opponents at the Centre and a state have faced off, even with violence, in the past. But the battle has never been so unequal as it is in this case between Mamata and Modi. For there is not a public institution in West Bengal — police, judiciary, bureaucracy — where Modi/RSS haven’t already made inroads.
The Supreme Court, too, has more often than not gone against Mamata on most cases concerning West Bengal. It is neither a secret nor a surprise that in recent years India’s top court has been averse to ruling against Modi or Modi’s government, or even against Amit Shah.
In West Bengal, only a foolish police officer or bureaucrat would offer his unflinching loyalty to Mamata, given how the ruthless Modi-Shah machine have made mincemeat of such officers of any state — including by using the judiciary — if and when they chose to side with forces that were against the duo’s interests and diktat.
Lately, the Supreme Court has supported Center’s action against Mamata’s police and bureaucrats.In short, Mamata’s government may already be hollowed from within. Then there is the wider civil society.
While the RSS was always a massive elephant, Modi is the real juggernaut in today’s India. For years we have thought that Modi had the Indian news media by the jugular. But we all had it wrong. Modi hasn’t ever needed to bother to find the news media’s jugular.
Because such had his political persona become from even before he was prime minister that it had a chokehold over the imagination of hundreds of millions of English- and Hindi-speaking (and now many of the Bengali-speaking) well-to-do middles classes that make up India’s journalists, corporate executives, military officers, bureaucrats, artists, writers, film-makers, actors, lawyers, judges, students, et al.
When the Communists ruled West Bengal, Kolkata’s middle classes notoriously led the rebellion and fell in Mamata’s lap. Now, at Modi’s bidding, they will do to Mamata what they had then done to the Marxists.
Notice how brilliantly Modi-Shah are strategizing this time around. Already doctors in Maharashtra and Delhi — and even private sector doctors! including from Fortis Gurgaon! — are going on strike in support of Kolkata’s doctors who are striking against brutal violence against two doctors, allegedly by family members of a Muslim patient who died at a government hospital there.
This is just the opportunity Modi-Shah thrive on, and now they have millions of eyes, ears, hands and hearts ready to fight their battle against Mamata. Mamata will be taken down for sure, if not now then in a while. It took three years, from 2011 to 2014, for UPA and the Congress to be wiped out.
Akhilesh Yadav’s government may have lived its five years, but his politics tottered the day the Muzaffarnagar violence began in 2013, and sputtered out over the next four years until the BJP swept Uttar Pradesh.
There was once a man named Lalu Yadav who dared to take on the RSS. As Manmohan’s Railway Minister during 2004-09, Lalu tried to pin the Godhra train fire on Modi. Modi never forgave him for that. Today, as Lalu rots in prison, there is not a judge in Jharkhand, where the so-called fodder scam cases lie, or at the Supreme Court who will dare to give Lalu bail. Forget Lalu, the Supreme Court can’t even dare to give Sanjiv Bhatt bail.
At last now Lalu has realized that there’s no hope for him. This is not to say Mamata will find herself in prison for sure — although that’s the very plan that Modi-Shah have for her, through the so-called Sarada corruption case.
But first, Mamata will be politically discredited and then decimated, just as Lalu was, just like a matador incapacitates the raging bull before putting it down with a knife through its heart.
Now do you understand why the likes of Mulayam never say a word against Modi? Forget political opposition, there is not even a social opposition to Modi. He, his politics and his worldview are the only dominant phenomena.
I, of course, will continue to oppose all three till my dying breath.
---
Source: Author's Facebook timeline

Comments

TRENDING

From Kerala to Bangladesh: Lynching highlights deep social faultlines

By A Representative   The recent incidents of mob lynching—one in Bangladesh involving a Hindu citizen and another in Kerala where a man was killed after being mistaken for a “Bangladeshi”—have sparked outrage and calls for accountability.  

What Sister Nivedita understood about India that we have forgotten

By Harasankar Adhikari   In the idea of a “Vikshit Bharat,” many real problems—hunger, poverty, ill health, unemployment, and joblessness—are increasingly overshadowed by the religious contest between Hindu and Muslim fundamentalisms. This contest is often sponsored and patronised by political parties across the spectrum, whether openly Hindutva-oriented, Islamist, partisan, or self-proclaimed secular.

When a city rebuilt forgets its builders: Migrant workers’ struggle for sanitation in Bhuj

Khasra Ground site By Aseem Mishra*  Access to safe drinking water and sanitation is not a privilege—it is a fundamental human right. This principle has been unequivocally recognised by the United Nations and repeatedly affirmed by the Supreme Court of India as intrinsic to the right to life and dignity under Article 21 of the Constitution. Yet, for thousands of migrant workers living in Bhuj, this right remains elusive, exposing a troubling disconnect between constitutional guarantees, policy declarations, and lived reality.

Aravalli at the crossroads: Environment, democracy, and the crisis of justice

By  Rajendra Singh*  The functioning of the Ministry of Environment, Forests and Climate Change has undergone a troubling shift. Once mandated to safeguard forests and ecosystems, the Ministry now appears increasingly aligned with industrial interests. Its recent affidavit before the Supreme Court makes this drift unmistakably clear. An institution ostensibly created to protect the environment now seems to have strayed from that very purpose.

'Festive cheer fades': India’s housing market hits 17‑quarter slump, sales drop 16% in Q4 2025

By A Representative   Housing sales across India’s nine major real estate markets fell to a 17‑quarter low in the October–December period of 2025, with overall absorption dropping 16% year‑on‑year to 98,019 units, according to NSE‑listed analytics firm PropEquity. This marks the weakest quarter since Q3 2021, despite the festive season that usually drives demand. On a sequential basis, sales slipped 2%, while new launches contracted by 4%.  

Safety, pay and job security drive Urban Company gig workers’ protest in Gurugram

By A Representative   Gig and platform service workers associated with Urban Company have stepped up their protest against what they describe as exploitative and unsafe working conditions, submitting a detailed Memorandum of Demands at the company’s Udyog Vihar office in Gurugram. The action is being seen as part of a wider and growing wave of dissatisfaction among gig workers across India, many of whom have resorted to demonstrations, app log-outs and strikes in recent months to press for fair pay, job security and basic labour protections.

India’s universities lag global standards, pushing students overseas: NITI Aayog study

By Rajiv Shah   A new Government of India study, Internationalisation of Higher Education in India: Prospects, Potential, and Policy Recommendations , prepared by NITI Aayog , regrets that India’s lag in this sector is the direct result of “several systemic challenges such as inadequate infrastructure to provide quality education and deliver world-class research, weak industry–academia collaboration, and outdated curricula.”

The rise of the civilizational state: Prof. Pratap Bhanu Mehta warns of new authoritarianism

By A Representative   Noted political theorist and public intellectual Professor Pratap Bhanu Mehta delivered a poignant reflection on the changing nature of the Indian state today, warning that the rise of a "civilizational state" poses a significant threat to the foundations of modern democracy and individual freedom. Delivering the Achyut Yagnik Memorial Lecture titled "The Idea of Civilization: Poison or Cure?" at the Ahmedabad Management Association, Mehta argued that India is currently witnessing a self-conscious political project that seeks to redefine the state not as a product of a modern constitution, but as an instrument of an ancient, authentic civilization.

Why experts say replacing MGNREGA could undo two decades of rural empowerment

By A Representative   A group of scientists, academics, civil society organisations and field practitioners from India and abroad has issued an open letter urging the Union government to reconsider the repeal of the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (MGNREGA) and to withdraw the newly enacted Viksit Bharat–Guarantee for Rozgar and Ajeevika Mission (Gramin) Act, 2025. The letter, dated December 27, 2025, comes days after the VB–G RAM G Bill was introduced in the Lok Sabha on December 16 and subsequently approved by both Houses of Parliament, formally replacing the two-decade-old employment guarantee law.