Terming Narendra Modi as "common candidate" for all corporates and communal forces, CPI-M General Secretary Prakash Karat today said all non-Congress parties should have fielded a consensus candidate against the BJP prime ministerial nominee.
"Some time ago, many people told me that there should be a common candidate against Modi, to which I said we are ready to withdraw our candidate if all non-Congress parties can come together to field one single candidate to take on the BJP leader," Karat said here.
"However, the parties could not reach any such consensus," he said, while adding that only a Left candidate can now fight capitalism and communal forces.
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Accusing Modi of being a candidate for capitalism and communal forces, Karat claimed that it was the first time in India when all corporates were supporting one single person.
He said so far it was the Congress government that was working for the interest of corporates, but the latter have now switched sides to Modi after an economic downturn.
Recalling the Lok Sabha polls of 1991, Karat said the Left had fielded Raj Kishore then and just before polling riots had taken place.
That year, BJP for the first time won from Varanasi and has retained this seat in five elections since then, he said.
Karat alleged that BJP has been very active with its communal agenda in Varanasi since then and it has now fielded the Gujarat Chief Minister from here as part of its then slogan of "moving to Kashi and Mathura after Ayodhya".
The senior Left leader said Modi was being fielded from here as part of a "well-thought-out plan of BJP and RSS" to further their communal agenda and polarise the voters on religious lines.