1996 West Bengal Legislative Assembly election explained

Country:India
Type:legislative
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:1991 West Bengal Legislative Assembly election
Previous Year:1991
Next Election:2001 West Bengal Legislative Assembly election
Next Year:2001
Election Date:13 May 1996
Seats For Election:All 294 seats in the West Bengal Legislative Assembly
Majority Seats:148
Turnout:82.94% (6.14 pp)
Outgoing Members:1991 West Bengal Legislative Assembly election#Elected members
Elected Members:1996 West Bengal Legislative Assembly election#Elected members
Leader1:Jyoti Basu
Party1:Communist Party of India (Marxist)
Alliance1:Left Front (West Bengal)
Leaders Seat1:Satgachhia
Last Election1:36.87%, 182 seats
Seats1:153
Seat Change1: 29
Popular Vote1:13,670,198
Percentage1:37.16%
Swing1: 1.05 pp
Leader2:Somen Mitra
Leaders Seat2:Sealdah
Party2:Indian National Congress (Indira)
Alliance2:INC(I) + JMM
Last Election2:35.12%, 43 seats
Seats2:82
Seat Change2: 39
Popular Vote2:14,523,964
Percentage2:39.48%
Swing2: 4.36 pp
Chief Minister
Posttitle:Chief Minister after election
Before Election:Jyoti Basu
Before Party:Communist Party of India (Marxist)
After Election:Jyoti Basu
After Party:Communist Party of India (Marxist)

Legislative Assembly elections were held in the Indian state of West Bengal in 1996. The election took place simultaneously with the 1996 Indian general election.[1] [2] This was the last election Jyoti Basu contested, as he retired from politics in 2000.

Parties

Left Front

The Communist Party of India (Marxist) had fielded 70 new candidates, but many of them failed to get elected. The All India Forward Bloc had suffered a split before the election, with the emergence of the Forward Bloc (Socialist).

The Left Front supported Janata Dal candidates in five constituencies.

Indian National Congress

Factionalism was rife within the state Congress unit. After being out of power in the state for about 20 years with no significant increase in either vote-share or number of seats in the last 15 years, most state Congress leaders had given up the hopes of defeating the Left Front & sought to re-evaluate their strategy. The elections took place alongside the general elections, in which there were 4 major players - the Bharatiya Janata Party-led Hindu right wing alliance, the centre-left alliance led by Janata Dal made up of Congress dissidents, the centrist alliance of the Congress party & the leftist alliance of Communist parties, out of which the BJP & JD didn't have much influence in the state. In 1991, the Congress under P. V. Narasimha Rao was able to form a minority government with the support of the Janata Dal, however Rao's tenure saw the Congress rife with defection of some of its senior leaders & charges of corruption. The political climate of India was charged with the issue of Ram-mandir, following the demolition of Babri Masjid in 1992. The BJP made the construction of Ram-mandir on the Ram Janmabhoomi site its primary electoral promise while the Janata Dal banked on the implementation of the Mandal Commission report as its main electoral plank in order to counter the BJP, leading to conflict between OBC & SC groups. However, the Mandir-Mandal issue didn't have much impact in the politics of the state which had been under Communist rule since 1977. As the Janata Dal was open to supporting both BJP & Congress, the support of the Left Front became the more important on the national stage. CPI(M) stalwart & the incumbent Chief Minister Jyoti Basu had been even offered the post of Prime Minister by the Congress when the Janata Dal government of V. P. Singh collapsed in 1990 due to BJP's withdrawal of support & again when the Congress withdrew its support from Chandra Shekhar's government in 1991.

In midst of such political instability, 2 factions developed within the state Congress unit. One faction led by Pranab Mukherjee was in favour of forging an electoral understanding with the Left Front in the state in order to gain their support on the national level. The other faction led by anti-Communist leaders like Siddharta Shankar Ray & Priya Ranjan Dasmunsi was stauchly opposed to it. The rivalry between these 2 groups played out in open during the 1992 elections to the post of state PCC president. The pro-Communist faction sided with Mukherjee's protégé, 4-time Sealdah MLA Somen Mitra, while the anti-Communist faction sided with Ray's protégé, state Youth Congress president & South Kolkata MP Mamata Banerjee.[3] Mukherjee played a decisive role in ensuring Mitra's victory in this election by having Banerjee's main supporter Ray sent out of the state as India's ambassador to the US at that time. Somen Mitra's and Mamata Banerjee's factions continued to fight over the choice of candidates to be fielded. Banerjee played an important role in rallying public support for the party & fielding many new faces from the Youth Congress as the party's candidate.[4] [5]

The Congress leader Adhir Ranjan Chowdhury contested the Nabagram seat from jail, being imprisoned on murder charges.[6] His speeches were recorded from prison and played at campaign meetings.[6]

The Indian National Congress and the Jharkhand Mukti Morcha had entered into alliance.[7]

Results

The Left Front won the election, entering into government for a fifth consecutive term.[8] Winning 203 out of 294 seats, the 1996 election represented the first major electoral set-back for the Left Front since its foundation. The electoral losses were primarily felt in Calcutta and the industrial areas, and nine incumbent Left Front ministers failed to get re-elected. All JD candidates finished in second place and RCPI lost its representation in the assembly. However, in terms of votes the Left Front and the five JD candidates got 18,143,795 votes (49.3%).[9] Jyoti Basu's fifth Left Front government was sworn in, with 48 ministers representing all 13 districts of the state.[10]

PartyCandidatesSeatsVotes%
Left Front and alliesCommunist Party of India (Marxist)21315313,670,19837.16
All India Forward Bloc34211,912,1835.20
Revolutionary Socialist Party23181,367,4393.72
Communist Party of India126642,9931.75
Marxist Forward Bloc<-- on CPI(M) ticket in Jamalpur and Tarakeswar-->22150,0990.41
Democratic Socialist Party (Prabodh Chandra)<-- contesting on CPI(M) ticket in Egra-->22129,3670.35
Revolutionary Communist Party of India (Rasik Bhatt)20105,3660.29
Biplobi Bangla Congress<-- Contesting as independent in Sabang -->1160,4530.16
Janata Dal50105,6970.29
Indian National Congress2888214,523,96439.48
Bharatiya Janata Party29202,372,4806.45
Gorkha National Liberation Front33161,4980.44
Jharkhand Party (Naren)81145,5030.40
Jharkhand Mukti Morcha260134,4360.37
Forward Bloc (Socialist)201123,3160.34
Bahujan Samaj Party48067,8530.18
Communist Party of India (Marxist–Leninist) Liberation30047,2060.13
Akhil Bharatiya Gorkha League3043,2610.12
All India Indira Congress (Tiwari)29020,5550.06
Muslim League20019,2210.05
Amra Bangalee46017,3300.05
Jharkhand Mukti Morcha (Mardi)5011,5930.03
Pachim Banga Rajya Muslim League505,3590.01
Indian National League704,4800.01
Social Action Party1604,4760.01
Jharkhand Party503,5330.01
Hul Jharkhand Party203,3090.01
Bharatiya Minorities Suraksha Mahasangh202,4480.01
Samajwadi Jan Parishad201,2180.00
Indian Democratic People's Party305150.00
All India Christian Democratic and Backward People's Party103920.00
Indian Union Muslim League102510.00
Akhil Bharatiya Hindu Mahasabha201780.00
Akhil Bharatiya Jan Sangh10490.00
Independents<-- excluding LF candidate contesting as independents -->8444898,6772.44
Total2,03529436,788,753100
align=left colspan=6Source: Election Commission of India[11]

Elected members

ConstituencyReserved for
(SC/ST/None)
MemberParty
Mekliganj SC Ramesh Roy
Sitalkuchi SC Sudhir Pramanik
Mathabhanga SC Dinesh Chandra Dakua
Cooch Behar North None
Cooch Behar West None Soumindra Chandra Das
Sitai None Md. Fazle Haque
Dinhata None
Natabari None Sibendra Narayan Chowdhuri
Tufanganj SC Puspa Chandra Das
Kumargram ST Salib Toppo
Kalchini ST
Alipurduars None Nirmal Das
Falakata SC
Madarihat ST Sushil Kujur
Dhupguri SC Banamali Roy
Nagrakata ST Chaitan Munda
Mainaguri SC Bachcha Mohan Ray
Mal ST Jagannath Oraon
Kranti None Sudhan Raha
Jalpaiguri None Anupam Sen
Rajganj SC Jatindra Nath Roy
Kalimpong None Gaulan Lepcha
Darjeeling None Nar Bahadur Chettri
Kurseong None
Siliguri None
Phansidewa ST Prokash Minj
Chopra None Mahamuddin
Islampur None Abdul Karim Chowdhury
Goalpokhar None Hafiz Alam Sairani
Karandighi None Suresh Chandra Singha
Raiganj SC Dilip Kumar Das
Kaliaganj SC
Kushmandi SC Narmada Chandra Roy
Itahar None Sri Kumar Mukherjee
Gangarampur None Minati Ghosh
Tapan ST Khara Soren
Kumarganj None Roy Dwijendra Nath
Balurghat None
Habibpur ST Jadu Hembram
Gajol ST Debnath Murmu
Kharba None Mahbubul Hoque
Harishchandrapur None Birendra Kumar Maitra
Ratua None Samar Mukherjee
Araidanga None Sabitri Mitra
Malda SC
Englishbazar None Goutam Chakravartty
Manikchak None Ram Prabesh Mondal
Suzapur None
Kaliachak None
Farakka None
Aurangabad None
Suti None
Sagardighi SC Das Paresh Nath
Jangipur None
Lalgola None
Bhagabangola None Abu Sufian Sarkar
Nabagram None
Murshidabad None Mozammel Haque
Jalangi None Unus Sarkar
Domkal None
Naoda None Jayanta Kumar Biswas
Hariharpara None Mozammel Haque
Berhampore None
Beldanga None Timir Baran Bhaduri
Kandi None
Khargram SC Biswanath Mandal
Barwan None Debabrata Banerjee
Bharatpur None Id Mahammad
Karimpur None Chittaranjan Biswas
Palashipara None Kamalendu Sanyal (sasthi)
Nakashipara None Shaikh Khabir Uddin Ahmed
Kaliganj None Abdus Salam Munshi
Chapra None Mir Quasem Mondal
Krishnaganj SC Sushil Biswas
Krishnagar East None Sibdas Mukherjee
Krishnagar West None Sunil Kumar Ghosh
Nabadwip None Biswanath Mitra
Santipur None Ajoy De
Hanskhali SC Biswas Shashanka Shekhor
Ranaghat East SC Binay Krishna Biswas
Ranaghat West None
Chakdaha None Satyasadhan Chakraborty
Haringhata None Mili Hira
Bagdaha SC Kamalakshi Biswas
Bongaon None Pankaj Ghosh
Gaighata None Manmatha Roy
Habra None Baren Basu
Ashokenagar None Nirode Roy Choudhury
Amdanga None
Barasat None Ashoke Mukherjee
Rajarhat SC
Deganga None Md. Yakub
Swarupnagar None Mostafa Bin Quassem
Baduria None Quazi Abdul Guffar
Basirhat None Narayan Mukherjee
Hasnabad None
Haroa SC Kshiti Ranjan Mondal
Sandeshkhali SC
Hingalganj SC Nripen Gayen
Gosaba SC Ganesh Mondal
Basanti SC
Kultali SC Prabod Purkait
Joynagar None Deba Prasad Sarkar
Baruipur None
Canning West SC Bimal Mistry
Canning East None
Bhangar None
Jadavpur None
Sonarpur SC Bhadreswar Mondal
Bishnupur East SC Ananda Kumar Biswas
Bishnupur West None Sankar Saran Naskar
Behala East None Kumkum Chakraborti
Behala West None Nirmal Mukherjee
Garden Reach None Mohammed Amin
Maheshtala None Mursalin Molla
Budge Budge None
Satgachia None
Falta None Sudhir Bhattacharjee
Diamond Harbour None Sheikh Daulat Ali
Magrahat West None Abul Basar Laskar
Magrahat East SC Nirmal Sinha
Mandirbazar SC Nikunja Paik
Mathurapur None
Kulpi SC Sakuntala Paik
Patharpratima None Gopal Krishna Dey
Kakdwip None Ashok Giri
Sagar None Prabhanjan Mondal
Bijpur None Kamal Sengupta Basu
Naihati None Ranjit Kundu
Bhatpara None Bidyut Ganguli
Jagatdal None Anay Gopal Sinha
Noapara None Madan Mohan Nath
Titagarh None Prabin Kumar Shaw
Khardah None Dr. Ashim Kumar Dasgupta
Panihati None
Kamarhati None
Baranagar None Amar Choudhury
Dum Dum None Sankar Sen
Belgachia East None
Cossipur None Tarak Bandyopadhyay
Shyampukur None Santi Ranjan Ganguly
Jorabagan None
Jorasanko None
Bara Bazar None
Bow Bazar None
Chowringhee None
Kabitirtha None
Alipore None
Rashbehari Avenue None
Tollygunge None
Dhakuria None
Ballygunge None
Entally None
Taltola SC Tapati Saha
Beliaghata None
Sealdah None
Vidyasagar None
Burtola None
Manicktola None
Belgachia West None
Bally None Kanika Ganguly
Howrah North None Lagan Deo Singh
Howrah Central None
Howrah South None Pralay Talukdar
Shibpur None
Domjur None
Jagatballavpur None M. Ansaruddin
Panchla None Gulsan Mullick
Sankrail SC Sital Kumar Sardar
Uluberia North SC Ramjanam Majhi
Uluberia South None Ghose Rabindra
Shyampur None Sanjib Kumar Das
Bagnan None Sabuj Dutta
Kalyanpur None
Amta None Pratyush Mukherjee
Udaynarayanpur None Nanigopal Chowdhury
Jangipara None Ibha Dey
Chanditala None
Uttarpara None Jyoti Krishna Chattapadhyay
Serampore None Jyoti Chowdhury
Champdani None Abdul Mannan
Chandernagore None Kamal Mukherjee
Singur None Das Bidyut Kumar
Haripal None Kali Prasad Biswas
Tarakeswar None Pratim Chatterjee
Chinsurah None Naren Dey
Bansberia None Robin Mukherjee
Balagarh SC Dibakanta Routh
Pandua None Ali Sk. Majed
Polba None Saktipada Khanra
Dhaniakhali SC Kripasindhu Saha
Pursurah None Nimai Mal
Khanakul SC Banshi Badan Maitra
Arambagh None Binoy Datta
Goghat SC Shiba Prasad Malick
Chandrakona None Gurupada Dutta
Ghatal SC Ratan Pakhira
Daspur None Mukhopadhaya Chitta Ranjan
Nandanpur None Chhaya Bera
Panskura West None Chitta Ranjan Das Thakur
Panskura East None Biplab Ray Chowdhury
Tamluk None Anil Mudi
Moyna None Dipak Bera
Mahishadal None Sukumar Das
Sutahata SC Tushar Kanti Mandal
Nandigram None Debisankar Panda
Narghat None Brahmamoy Nanda
Bhagabanpur None Khanra Ajit
Khajuri SC Mondal Ramchandra
Contai North None Chakradhar Maikap
Contai South None
Ramnagar None Mrinal Kanti Roy
Egra None
Mugberia None
Pataspur None Kamakhya Nandan Das Mahapatra
Sabang None Bangal Makhanlal
Pingla None Ram Pada Samanta
Debra None Sk. Jahangir Karim
Keshpur SC Nandarani Dal
Garhbeta East None
Garhbeta West SC Krishnaprasad Duley
Salbani None Khagendra Nath Mahato
Midnapore None Purnendu Sengupta
Kharagpur Town None
Kharagpur Rural None Haque Nazmul
Keshiari ST Maheswar Murmu
Narayangarh None
Dantan None Nanda Gopal Bhattacharjee
Nayagram ST Subhas Chandra Saren
Gopiballavpur None Rana Sakti
Jhargram None Buddhadev Bhakat
Binpur ST Naren Hansda
Banduan ST Lakhiram Kisku
Manbazar None Kamala Kanta Mahata
Balrampur ST Bhandu Majhi
Arsa None Nishi Kanta Mehta
Jhalda None Satya Ranjan Mahato
Jaipur None
Purulia None Mamata Mukherjee
Para SC Bilasi Bala Sahis
Raghunathpur SC Natabar Bagdi
Kashipur ST Rabindranath Hembram
Hura None Abinas Mahato
Taldangra None
Raipur ST Upen Kisku
Ranibandh ST
Indpur SC Kirity Bagdi
Chhatna None Subhas Goswami
Gangajalghati SC Angad Bauri
Barjora None Susmita Biswas
Bankura None
Onda None Anil Mukherjee
Vishnupur None Jayanta Chowdhury
Kotulpur None Gouripada Dutta
Indas SC Nandadulal Majhi
Sonamukhi SC Haradhan Bauri
Kulti None Acharyya Maniklal
Barabani None Manik Upadhyay
Hirapur None Shyamadas Banerjee
Asansol None
Raniganj None Bansha Gopal Chowdhury
Jamuria None Pelab Kabi
Ukhra SC Bagdi Lakhan
Durgapur-i None Mrinal Banerjee
Durgapur-ii None Debabrata Benerjee
Kanksa SC Ankura Saresh
Ausgram SC Kartick Chandra Bag
Bhatar None Subhas Mondal
Galsi None Idrish Mondal
Burdwan North None Nisith Adhikary
Burdwan South None Shyamaprosad Bose
Khandaghosh SC Dalui Shibaprasad
Raina None Shyamaprosad Pal
Jamalpur SC Samar Hazra
Memari None Tapas Chattopadhyay
Kalna None Anju Kar
Nadanghat None Biren Ghosh
Manteswar None
Purbasthali None Dutta Himangshu
Katwa None
Mangalkot None Sadhana Mallik
Ketugram SC Majhi Tamal
Nanur SC Anandagopal Das
Bolpur None Tapan Hore
Labhpur None Manik Chandra Mondal
Dubrajpur None Bhakti Bhusan Mondal
Rajnagar SC Bijoy Bagdi
Suri None
Mahammad Bazar None Dhiren Sen
Mayureswar SC Dhiren Let
Rampurhat None Mahammad Hannan
Hansan SC
Nalhati None
Murarai None Motahar Hossain

Aftermath

The Congress lost power in the general elections to the BJP, however BJP was unable to obtain majority in the Parliament on its own. Jyoti Basu, who had been re-elected as CM for a record 5th time, was offered the post of Prime Minister by both the Congress & the Janata Dal following the resignation of BJP's Atal Bihari Vajpayee within 13 days of assuming power due to lack of numbers in the Lok Sabha, lack of a consensual prime-ministerial candidate in the Congress & V. P. Singh refusing to become prime minister again. However CPI(M)'s highest decision-making body refused this offer, believing that if it accepted Basu's prime-ministership, then due to lack of numbers in the Lok Sabha, it would have to bend to the will of the Congress, which it saw as a bourgeois organisation. Jyoti Basu later remarked that this decision of the CPI(M) was a "historic blunder". Thus being denied prime-ministership, Basu put forward the name of Janata Dal leader & Karnataka CM H. D. Deve Gowda as the prime-ministerial candidate, which was accepted by the Congress, Janata-Dal, Left Front & other parties allied with them. Deve Gowda resigned after a year due to withdrawal of Congress' support & was succeeded by his Minister of External Affairs, Janata Dal leader Inder Kumar Gujral. Gujral resigned a year later, due to split in the Janata Dal caused by Lalu Prasad Yadav's expulsion due to his involvement in the fodder scam & the Congress withdrawing its support due to Gujral's refusal to expel DMK from the government, whose leader M. Karunanidhi had been implicated in assisting Rajiv Gandhi's murder in Jain Commission's report.

In January 1998, following disagreements with both AICC President Sitaram Kesri & state PCC president Somen Mitra over the Congress party's approach towards the Left Front, Mamata Banerjee left the Congress & formed her own party, consisting mostly of the supporters of Siddhartha Shankar Ray. Her party, in alliance with BJP, won 7 seats from the state in the general elections held on February that year, while the Congress retained only one seat & lost 7 others from the state. Somen Mitra resigned as the state PCC chief after this debacle & was succeeded by A. B. A. Ghani Khan Choudhury, the lone Congress MP from the state.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: M. L. Ahuja. Handbook of General Elections and Electoral Reforms in India, 1952–1999. 2000. Mittal Publications. 978-81-7099-766-5. 49.
  2. The Hindu. The case against simultaneous polls
  3. Web site: No ‘Ekla Cholo’ For Pranab Mukherjee, He Believed In ‘Sabka Saath. timesofindia.indiatimes.com.
  4. India Today. West Bengal: Advantage Left Front
  5. rediff.com. The X Factor
  6. Indian Express. TMC’s Madan Mitra electoral battle from jail looks a winner
  7. Communist Party of India (Marxist). Review of the May 2001 Assembly Elections (may 2001)
  8. India Today. Shrinking mandate
  9. Election Commission of India. STATISTICAL REPORT ON GENERAL ELECTION, 1991 TO THE LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY OF WEST BENGAL
  10. Book: N. Jose Chander. Coalition Politics: The Indian Experience. 1 January 2004. Concept Publishing Company. 978-81-8069-092-1. 105–111.
  11. Election Commission of India. STATISTICAL REPORT ON GENERAL ELECTION, 1996 TO THE LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY OF WEST BENGAL