Anadi Das should not be confused with Anadi Charan Das.
Anadi Das | |
Party: | Revolutionary Communist Party of India Revolutionary Communist Party of India (Tagore) Revolutionary Communist Party of India (Das) |
Constituency Am: | Howrah West |
Assembly: | West Bengal Legislative |
Term Start: | 1962 |
Term End: | 1967 |
Predecessor: | Bankim Chandra Kar |
Constituency Am2: | Howrah Central |
Assembly2: | West Bengal Legislative |
Term Start2: | 1969 |
Term End2: | 1971 |
Anadi Das was an Indian politician, belonging to the Revolutionary Communist Party of India.[1]
Das was a Central Committee member of RCPI.[2] Das contested the Howrah West constituency seat of the West Bengal Legislative Assembly in the 1957 election.[3] Das finished in third place with 5,378 votes (20.04%).[3]
Das won the Howrah West constituency seat in the West Bengal Legislative Assembly in the 1962 election.[1] [4] He defeated the incumbent assembly speaker Bankim Chandra Kar.[4] [5] [6] Das obtained 19,770 votes (44.59%).[4] He contested the Howrah Central constituency seat in the 1967 election.[7] Das finished in second place with 15,663 votes (32.48%).[7] As of 1967 he served as president of the National Screw & Wire Products Workmen's Union as well as the Asia Electric Workers' Union, both being affiliated with the All India Trade Union Congress.[8]
He won the Howrah Central seat in the 1969 election.[1] Das obtained 28,522 votes (58.85%).[9]
Das and the other RCPI legislator M. Mokshed Ali were expelled from RCPI by party general secretary Sudhindranath Kumar in July 1969 for "anti-Party and anti-UF activities".[10] [11] [12] The expulsion provoked a split in RCPI, with Anadi Das leading his own RCPI faction.[13] Ahead of the 1971 West Bengal Legislative Assembly election the RCPI (Anadi Das group) joined the Communist Party of India-led Eight Party Coalition.[14] Das ran on an independent ticket in Howrah Central, against Kumar.[15] Das finished in fourth place with 2,711 votes (8.55%).[15]
Das' faction later joined the S.N. Tagore-led RCPI faction.[16] After the death of Tagore, RCPI (S.N. Tagore group) was split with Das leading one of the factions.[16]