Kolkata (WB): Religious polarisation, National Register of Citizens (NRC) and the vote-catching capacity of a renewed Congress-Left Front alliance could be the game changers as principal rivals Trinamool Congress and the BJP battle it out in the bypolls to three Assembly seats in West Bengal to be held on Monday.
The by-elections, the first test of popularity for the state's political opponents after the Lok Sabha polls, are being held in the backdrop of the tumultuous political developments in Maharashtra.
However, back in Bengal, the bypolls are not going to bring about any change of government, yet that fact has by no means diminished their significance.
In fact, poll watchers feel, with the state's politics standing at the crossroads, the results and voting trends in the three Assembly constituencies -- Kaliaganj, Karimpur and Kharagpur Sadar -- could to some extent shape the future course of events in the run-up to the 2021 Assembly polls.
The general elections earlier this year saw an unbelievable emergence of the BJP in the state, where it had been shaky and a fringe player for over three and a half decades. The party not only pushed up its seat tally from 2 to 18 but also raised its vote share to 40 per cent, more than double of what it got five years back.
On the other hand, the Mamata Banerjee-led Trinamool Congress, which had been winning all elections with a thumping majority since coming to power in 2011, saw its seat count dip to 22 from the 34 it won in 2014. The Congress managed two seats, while the Left Front drew a blank
The Trinamool has since then roped in poll strategist Prashant Kishor, and on his suggestion, rolled out several mass outreach programmes, including the much-talked-about ''Didi Ke Bolo'' (Talk to ''Didi'', as Banerjee is fondly called) initiative, which is a helpline for people to reach out to the government with their grievances.
The elections thus provide the ruling party with an opportunity to gauge to what extent it has managed to improve its position.
As for the BJP, its performance would be an indicator of whether it has retained or further consolidated the public support it got back in April-May, or its stupendous show then was only a nine-day wonder.
The fact that two of the bypoll bound constituencies -- Kaliaganj in North Dinajpur district and Kharagpur Sadar in West Midnapore -- gave massive leads to heavyweight BJP candidates, Union Minister of State Debasree Chowdhury and state BJP chief Dilip Ghosh, in the Lok Sabha elections makes the coming battle virtually a matter of prestige for the state party leadership.
Chowdhury won from Raiganj and Ghosh from Midnapore. Karimpur, however, had given a decent margin to the Trinamool Congress.
The BJP, which reaped the fruits of communal polarisation in the Lok Sabha polls by rallying a huge number of Hindu votes behind it, is hoping to do an encore and repeat its successes in Kharagpur and Kaliaganj.
Even in Karimpur, analysts feel the polarisation -- both social and religious -- has only increased, making the seat a touch-and-go affair.