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Parties bracing for popularity test in municipal polls

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Press Trust of India Kolkata
Last Updated : Sep 25 2015 | 10:42 AM IST
The upcoming polls to the newly- formed Asansol and Bidhannagar municipal corporations in West Bengal are set to be a test of popularity for the political parties in the state ahead of next year's Assembly elections.
The elections will be held on October 3 and the results are to be announced on October 16.
The contest, which will be a four-cornered one with Trinamool Congress, CPI-M, BJP and Congress as the key players, holds immense political significance as it will be the last polls before the Assembly elections in April-May next year.
The ruling TMC, which had registered a massive victory in the last municipal and KMC elections in April, is looking to inflict a whitewash on opponent parties.
The party said it is looking for a full tally in the Bidhannagar and Asansol municipalities, which have 41 and 106 seats, respectively.
The Asansol municipal corporation was formed by merging Raniganj, Jamuria and Kulti municipalities while the Bidhannagar corporation was constituted by merging Bidhannagar and Rajarhat-Gopalpur municipalities.

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"We are not only confident about victory. We are eyeing an whitewash by winning all seats in Bidhannagar corporation.
"People will vote in favour of the development work that TMC had done during its tenure in Bidhannagar municipality, when it had not been merged with Rajarhat-Gopalpur," state food supplies minister and TMC North 24 parganas district president, Jyotipriyo Mullick, told PTI.
Although TMC has been on top in every poll in Bengal since its historic win in the 2011 Assembly elections, the Lok Sabha polls last year had seen the party take a beating in several wards at the hands of BJP in Bidhannagar despite clinching the Barasat Lok Sabha Constituency, under which Bidhannagar and Rajarahat-Gopalpur fall.
Although the TMC-led state government has termed the formation of the municipal corporation a necessity to get more funds from the Centre, the move is being seen as a ploy in some quarters as Rajarhat-Gopalpur has been a bastion of the TMC with sizeable minority votes.
Apart from BJP's rise in various wards, another factor that TMC has to deal with is factional fights between various groups of TMC in Rajarahat-Gopalpur and Bidhannagar.
The seriousness of the infighting issue can be gauged from the fact that TMC Supremo and West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee herself had conducted a meeting with various TMC groups led by MLA Sujit Bose, MLA Sabyasachi Dutta, and Tapas Chatterjee, a CPI(M) leader who had recently switched over to Trinamool.

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First Published: Sep 25 2015 | 10:42 AM IST

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