Several TMC Lawmakers in Touch, But No Induction Right Now: Bengal BJP Chief
In an interview with PTI, Bhattacharya said after securing a decisive mandate on its own, the party was under no compulsion to induct leaders from rival camps, and rejected any distinction between a "good TMC" and a "bad TMC".
He asserted that the party had learnt from its experience of large-scale defections ahead of the 2021 Assembly polls and would keep those lessons in mind in future.
At the same time, signalling what he described as a changed political reality in Bengal, Bhattacharya said Muslims should recognise that governments could be formed without depending on minority votes, arguing that the BJP's two-thirds majority had altered the state's electoral arithmetic.
Without naming any leader or disclosing any number, Bhattacharya said, "Several TMC MPs and MLAs are willing to join us, but I don't want to comment on figures."
He insisted that the BJP had little need for political imports. "Right now, the door is closed. We don't need any TMC leader to win elections anymore. We have won on our own," the state BJP chief said.
Asked whether the party's position could change in the future, Bhattacharya struck a guarded note.
"In politics, two plus two is not always four; we won't open our door for any tainted leader... this decision would be a collective decision and not of an individual," he said.
Even if the party eventually considers fresh entrants, those tainted by allegations of corruption, involvement in recruitment scams or links with the TMC's alleged syndicate network would not be welcome, he asserted.
Seeking to clarify his stand on the TMC rank and file, Bhattacharya categorically rejected suggestions that he had ever classified sections of the ruling party as either a "good TMC" or a "bad TMC".
"I have never said there is a good TMC or a bad TMC. TMC and corruption have become synonymous," he said.
He, however, maintained that a section of TMC supporters and workers had remained untouched by corruption and had backed the BJP in the election.
"There are people who were part of the TMC but stayed outside that corrupt ecosystem. Many of them voted for us," he said.
Bhattacharya said any future decision on whether such individuals could formally join the BJP would be taken collectively by the party and not by any individual leader.
Bhattacharya said Muslims should shed their "minority mindset" and see themselves as citizens first, asserting that the BJP's two-thirds majority in West Bengal had demonstrated that governments could be formed without depending on minority votes.
"This perception among Muslims that they are a minority has to go. The BJP has demonstrated that it can come to power with a two-thirds majority without fielding a single Muslim candidate and without depending on minority votes," he said.
The state BJP chief said, "We want Muslims to behave not as minorities but as citizens of West Bengal and India."
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