Bengal's Real Crisis: Why Sukanta Majumdar Says TMC Diverts from Key Issues

Union Minister Sukanta Majumdar has accused the Trinamool Congress of diverting attention from critical issues in West Bengal. He claims the real concerns are unemployment and crimes against women that the state government is trying to suppress. Meanwhile, TMC leader Abhishek Banerjee has threatened to take the Special Intensive Revision fight to Delhi if any eligible voters are removed. The controversy comes as the Election Commission prepares for the second phase of SIR across 12 states including West Bengal.

Key Points: Sukanta Majumdar Accuses TMC of Diverting from Bengal Issues

  • Union Minister accuses TMC of diverting attention from unemployment crisis
  • Claims women's safety being ignored amid SIR controversy
  • Abhishek Banerjee warns against CAA camps citing Assam detention centers
  • TMC threatens to take voter list fight to Delhi if names removed
3 min read

Trinamool diverting focus from real issues like unemployment, women's safety in West Bengal: Sukanta Majumdar

Union Minister Sukanta Majumdar claims TMC diverting focus from unemployment and women's safety in West Bengal amid SIR controversy with Abhishek Banerjee.

"They are trying to create an issue of the SIR. The real issue of Bengal is unemployment... Women are getting raped... They are trying to suppress these issues. - Sukanta Majumdar"

Kolkata, November 4

Union Minister Sukanta Majumdar on Tuesday accused the Trinamool Congress of diverting attention from key issues in West Bengal, stating that the real concerns are unemployment and crimes against women.

Speaking to ANI, Majumdar said, "They are trying to create an issue of the SIR. The real issue of Bengal is unemployment... Women are getting raped... They are trying to suppress these issues."

A day earlier, Trinamool Congress national general secretary and MP Abhishek Banerjee said that the party will take the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) fight to Delhi if even a single eligible voter is removed from Bengal's rolls, accusing the BJP and the Election Commission of India of acting in tandem to deprive the state of its identity.

"From the very start we have said that even if a single eligible voter is removed from the list, AITC will take this fight to Delhi; those who act as puppets of the central government to deprive Bengal of its identity and label us Bangladeshis for speaking Bangla will be challenged all the way to the capital," Banerjee said while addressing a press conferernce.

He questioned whether those who died following the announcement of the SIR were considered "valid or invalid voters."

"My question to the BJP and to their friends in the ECI is simple: the 5-6 people who have already died--were they valid or invalid voters?" he asked.

Banerjee urged people "not to fall prey to Citizenship (Amendment) Act camps" warning they risked the "same fate as Assam's victims" sent to detention centres, adding party workers and representatives would be deployed statewide to assist citizens.

He said, "I urge you not to fall prey to CAA camps being set up here; if anyone goes to those camps, you risk the same fate as Assam's victims, where people were sent to detention centres. No one should be scared, our workers are on the ground; from tomorrow, BLA-IIs will go door to door, help desks and camps will be set up, ward rooms will be activated in every constituency, and MPs and MLAs will be on duty, so there is nothing to fear."

He also referred to a series of suicides reportedly linked to panic over the SIR.

"Since SIR was announced a series of tragic incidents have followed; barely 5-6 days have passed and already six suicide cases have come to light, starting with Pradeep Kar in Panihati and a 95-year-old in Ilambazar, a case in Barasat, a person from Bardhaman in Tamil Nadu, and another in Dankuni, all driven by panic and anxiety over SIR," he said.

The ECI will conduct the second phase of SIR of electoral rolls across 12 States and Union Territories, with the final voter list to be published on February 7, 2026, Chief Election Commissioner (CEC) Gyanesh Kumar said. The first phase of SIR was completed in Bihar before the assembly polls.

Addressing a press conference in New Delhi, CEC Kumar said the exercise will cover Andaman and Nicobar Islands, Chhattisgarh, Goa, Gujarat, Kerala, Lakshadweep, Madhya Pradesh, Puducherry, Rajasthan, Tamil Nadu, Uttar Pradesh and West Bengal.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Both sides are playing politics. TMC is worried about voter lists while BJP is talking about unemployment. What about actual governance? We need solutions, not blame games.
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Sarah B
The women's safety issue is very real in Bengal. My sister lives in Howrah and she doesn't feel safe going out after 7 PM. Political parties should focus on making streets safer rather than fighting over electoral rolls.
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Arjun K
Abhishek Banerjee has a point about voter rights. If genuine citizens are being removed from voter lists, that's serious. But the suicide cases are tragic - government should ensure people don't panic about documentation processes.
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Nikhil C
As a small business owner in Siliguri, I can confirm unemployment is the biggest issue. Educated youth are leaving Bengal for jobs elsewhere. Political parties should work together to bring industries and create employment opportunities.
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Meera T
Why can't we have both? Clean voter lists AND focus on development issues? This either/or approach is harming Bengal's progress. We deserve better governance from all parties. 🙏

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