Not many people were taken by surprise when US
secretary of state Hillary Clinton paid an unusual visit to West Bengal chief
minister Mamata Banerjee - since everyone knew how influential and powerful she
was - more so because she was an important constituent of UPA coalition
government and could easily hold it to ransom over various 'reform' decisions.
Mamata Banerjee's power can also be gauged from the
fact that she literally grounded leftists in West Bengal by marking an end to
their more than three-decade-long rule in the state. She spent days and nights
fighting against the communist regime that had only dawned helplessness across
the state, according to many political experts.
More than her political promises, it is her
integrity that has made her a popular figure across West Bengal. While lower
rung political workers have been spotted travelling in luxury cars and dining
in fine restaurants in big towns and cities, Ms Banerjee, on the other hand
wears rubber flip-flops and inexpensive cotton saris, and drives a compact
Hyundai car, striking a chord with the common people in the state.
But on the flip side, the popular leader of Bengal
has become famous in the rest of the country not because of her concerns for
the “aam aadmi” but for her unpredictability. And not a wonder, she has been
embroiled in a number of controversies since she started her political career.
But her latest brush with controversy happened only recently – when she
withdrew her support from the Congress-led coalition government, after the
latter announced 'big bang reforms' that included FDI in retail business, hike
in diesel prices and capping on subsidised LPG cylinders.
Ms Banerjee has differed with the FDI decision
earlier as well and it was she who forced government to shelve it during last
year's fall. Raising her concerns for, what she called the benefit of aam
aadmi' she threatened the government over the decision, which she believes will
throw retailers out of business.
Talking of her issues with the current UPA
government, one can't forget how she forced Dinesh Trivedi, a Trinamool
Congress MP, to resign as railway minister, after he included an overall hike
in passenger fares while announcing the 2012 annual rail budget. Though the
hike was welcomed both by the UPA members and observers in the industry as
well, given the paltry condition Indian Railways is in, but that didn't deter
'didi' to force Mr Trivedi to resign, only to see his colleague Mukul Roy take
over. Not only this, Ms Banerjee saw to it that the fare hike was rolled back.
Ms Banerjee also defended the arrest of Ambikesh
Mahapatra, a professor of Jadavpur University, who was assaulted before being
arrested allegedly for circulating, what was claimed, defamatory cartoons of Ms
Banerjee.
During an interactive programme with students, Ms
Banerjee stormed out after getting uncomfortable with some questions.
Suprisingly, Ms Banerjee alleged that some of the students present during the
programme were 'Maoist cadres'. She even instructed the police to take pictures
of the students who asked her questions during the interaction.
While some experts have called Ms Banerjee
'illiterate and dictatorial' but that has never deterred the chief minister and
she exhibited it when she announced that a rape victim was lying despite the
police finding evidence that supported the victim's allegations. She even
crossed limits by demanding the arrest of a farmer who dared to question Ms
Banerjee over rising fertilizer prices.
Despite her unpredictable nature, Ms Banerjee's
attempt, whether right or wrong, has struck a chord with people from the middle
class, but there are also people who believe that she has committed a 'historic
blunder' by leaving the UPA government. Their argument is simple – the state
exchequer is empty and all the special packages will go to states like Uttar
Pradesh and Bihar and others, who draw closer to the Congress-led government
following her exit.



