AISF Sets Jan 31 Deadline for Left Front Alliance in Bengal Polls

The All India Secular Front (AISF) has extended an open offer for a seat-sharing arrangement with the CPI(M)-led Left Front for the upcoming West Bengal Assembly elections. AISF MLA Nawsad Siddique has set a deadline of January 31 for the Left Front to convey its final decision on the alliance. The offer is made irrespective of the Congress party's participation, as state Congress leaders have indicated a preference to contest alone. Furthermore, AISF has set a precondition for any alliance talks with the new Janata Unnayan Party, requiring an apology from its founder for past communal remarks.

Key Points: AISF Offers Alliance to Bengal Left Front, Sets Deadline

  • AISF offers alliance to Left Front
  • Sets January 31 deadline for decision
  • Congress may be excluded from pact
  • Alliance talks conditional for Janata Unnayan Party
2 min read

Bengal polls: AISF open for alliance with Left Front irrespective of Cong joining or not

AISF proposes seat-sharing with Left Front for Bengal polls, sets Jan 31 deadline. Congress may be excluded from the arrangement.

"The process for reaching an amicable seat-sharing agreement should start immediately and should end by this month. - Nawsad Siddique"

Kolkata, Jan 22

All India Secular Front has given an open seat-sharing arrangement offer to CPI-led Left Front in West Bengal for the Assembly elections in the state scheduled later this year, irrespective of whether Congress shows interest in being part of that arrangement or not.

However, at the same time, the lone AISF representative in the West Bengal Assembly, Nawsad Siddique, has set a deadline for the West Bengal Left Front to take a final decision in the matter and convey the same to the AISF leadership by January 31.

"The process for reaching an amicable seat-sharing agreement should start immediately and should end by this month. At least that will be the attempt on our part," said Siddique.

However, AISF sources made it clear, that the call for the seat-sharing agreement is only for the CPI(M)-led Left Front irrespective of whether Congress becomes a party to that arrangement or nor not considering that the current West Bengal leadership of the country's oldest national party had already given filler that they are keen for going alone for the Assembly elections this year.

To recall, the AISF became a party in the three-pronged alliance involving both Congress and Left Front for the West Bengal Assembly elections in 2021. However, AISF went out of that alliance in the 2024 Lok Sabha polls, mainly because of the differences with Congress over seat-sharing arrangements in the minority-dominated districts of Murshidabad and Malda, which again had been a traditional stronghold for Congress.

"So this time, we are looking for an alliance with the Left Front, keeping in mind that there cannot be any settlement on this count with Congress. It would have been better had there been a grand alliance involving all non-BJP and non-Trinamool Congress forces. But considering the current political situation in the state, that solution does not seem to have any distant possibility," the AISF sources said.

As regards the new political outfit, Janata Unnayan Party, founded by suspended Trinamool Congress legislator Humayun Kabir, the AISF's point-of-view is clear. Siddique has already said that alliance talks with Janata Unnayan Party could only start if Kabir apologises for the communal comments made in the past.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Setting a deadline of Jan 31 is putting pressure, but it's necessary. The Left Front can't afford to drag its feet. Voters need clarity on alliances well before the elections. Hope they finalize a sensible seat-sharing pact this time.
R
Rohit P
The 2021 three-pronged alliance was a disaster. Congress and Left couldn't work together then, what's changed now? AISF is right to focus just on the Left. Too many cooks spoil the broth, especially in Bengal politics.
S
Sarah B
Interesting development. As an observer, it seems like smaller parties are trying to create a viable third front. But without Congress, will it have enough muscle to challenge TMC and BJP? The math seems difficult.
N
Nikhil C
Respectfully, I have to criticize the constant alliance drama. It feels like our leaders are more focused on seat-sharing than on telling us what they'll actually do for Bengal's development. We need a vision, not just arithmetic.
K
Kavya N
Good on Siddique for making Kabir's apology a condition for alliance talks. We don't need more divisive rhetoric in our politics. Principles matter. 💯

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