Left Front hits historic low : The Tribune India

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Left Front hits historic low

NEW DELHI:Registering its worst poll performance in over six decades, the Left Front was virtually wiped off its bastions with the Lok Sabha poll results showing it managed just five seats across the country.

Left Front hits historic low

D Raja , CPI leader



New Delhi, May 24

Registering its worst poll performance in over six decades, the Left Front was virtually wiped off its bastions with the Lok Sabha poll results showing it managed just five seats across the country.

On its erstwhile turf in West Bengal, where it failed to win even one seat, its vote share reduced to a paltry 7 per cent from 23 per cent in 2014. And in Kerala, where it managed only one seat, its vote share was around 32 per cent.

In the eastern state, it was a debacle wherein all but one Left-wing party candidates lost their security deposits.

This was also the first time since 1952 that the Left Front did not end up with double digits in the General Election. Till now, while it had put up its most dismal show in 2014, winning only 12 seats — 12 less than what it had won in 2009 — its highest ever tally of 59 seats had come in 2004.

Once a Left stronghold, the CPI(M) has one seat in Kerala — Alappuzha. Another Left party, the Revolutionary Socialist Party (RSP), has won the Kollam seat in Kerala, but it is a part of the ruling Congress-led United Democratic Front (UDF) in the southern state.

In West Bengal, a state ruled by the Left for 34 uninterrupted years, it has drawn a blank, while it had won two seats in the state in 2014. The Left Front, comprising the Communist Party of India (CPI), CPI (Marxist-Leninist), the All India Forward Bloc (AIFB), CPI (Marxist) and the RSP, enjoyed its golden period in politics in the 1990s and early 2000s.

It had governments in three states during this period and held around 55-60 seats in Parliament. It played the role of kingmaker for the Third Front governments during 1996-98 by joining a 13-party coalition and for the Congress-led UPA in 2004. — PTI


The political ideology of the Left still has relevance, but it is not in tune with electoral politics. We need to do serious introspection, rework strategies, reorganise and reconnect with the masses. —D Raja , CPI leader

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