Kolkata:Former Chief Ministers of Bengal, like Jyoti Basu to Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee, had multiple terms at the office. So did Mamata Banerjee before her current and third term as the Chief Minister. But never before any of them faced major buffers as they started each of their terms. During Basu's tenure, there was the Bantala case and also the shooting of 13 youth Congress workers on 21 July 1993, while demanding Voter's Identity Card to be made the sole required document for voting. For Buddhadeb, there was the Singur, Nandigram and Netai crisis. But, all these came when both Basu and Bhattacharjee were well into their respective tenures.
For Mamata Banerjee, her third term is proving a hiccup from the very first day. From the strained relations between the Governor and the state government to the issue of post-poll violence and then the fake vaccination case, Mamata is embroiled in mounting pressure from multiple quarters. Why is this happening during the initial days of her tenure? Will there be a change in the pattern on how opposition parties placed themselves in West Bengal? What do the political observers and analysts have to say?
Undoubtedly Mamata Banerjee continues to enjoy the image of the most credible political face in the state. The results of the recently concluded West Bengal assembly elections have undoubtedly established that. Despite continuing to be quite popular nationally, Prime Minister, Narendra Modi's victory chariot has been stopped in West Bengal. However, BJP's target now is the 2024 Lok Sabha elections and the Saffron leadership is quite aware that to keep the national throne in New Delhi intact in 2024, they will have to keep the Chief Minister too busy in her state so that she cannot concentrate on her national-level ambitions.
Also Read:Mamata writes to PM, urges him to reduce tax charged by Centre on petrol, diesel
Political analysts believe that the third term of Mamata Bandopadhyay is quite different from her previous two terms. BJP, as the principal and the only opposition party in the state, is trying to create such pressure on the ruling party within and outside the state assembly since the very first day that it is bound to create a public perception that anything might happen with the current state government any day.