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regular-article-logo Friday, 22 November 2024

Tipra Motha: Regional party to reckon with

Party’s candidate Subodh Deb Barma was able to defeat deputy CM Jishnu Dev Varma in Charilam constituency by over 850 votes

PTI Agartala Published 04.03.23, 03:24 AM
Tipra Motha chairman Pradyot Bikram Manikya Deb Barma.

Tipra Motha chairman Pradyot Bikram Manikya Deb Barma. File picture

New regional party Tipra Motha, which fought the Tripura Assembly elections without an ally and clinched 13 seats, made significant inroads into the vote share of the BJP-IPFT and the Left-Congress alliance.

The political party, floated in 2021 seeking Greater Tipraland and banking on the tribal people who dominate 20 of the 60 Assembly seats, won the 13 seats of the 42 contested, polling around 19 per cent votes.

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The regional party’s candidate Subodh Deb Barma was able to defeat deputy chief minister Jishnu Dev Varma in the Charilam constituency by over 850 votes.

The BJP-IPFT alliance retained the state winning 33 seats in the 60-member Assembly on Thursday, 10 less than the figure in 2018, but nevertheless, a clear majority which will allow it to rule for five years without seeking help from the Tipra Motha.

The saffron party contested 55 seats and won 32, three less than it bagged in 2018. The party secured 38.97 per cent of the votes polled. The Indigenous People’s Front of Tripura (IPFT), which was affected by a factional fight, managed to emerge victorious in only one seat, while it had got eight seats five years back. Its vote share this time was a meagre 1.26 per cent.

The new party formed two years back by a scion of the state’s former princely family ate into the tribal votes of both the Left-Congress alliance, which secured 14 seats, as well.

The Tipra Motha’s entry into electoral politics was marked by a landslide victory in the Tripura Tribal Areas Autonomous District Council (TTAADC) elections in 2021, securing 18 of the 28 seats.

“I don’t foresee a bright future for the regional party as it will be a challenge for the Tipra Motha’s leadership to keep all the party MLAs within the party fold for the next five years”, veteran journalist Sanjib Deb said.

Replacing Biplab Kumar Deb with Manik Saha as the chief minister last year did “wonders for the BJP to downplay anti-incumbency”, he said.

In the 2018 Assembly elections, the BJP won 10 ST seats for the first time in the history of state politics riding on the popularity of its ally, the IPFT, and the IPFT won eight seats ensuring the defeat of the Communist regime.

Rebati Tripura, MP and state BJP vice-president, said: “Although the BJP secured a simple majority in the 60-member Assembly, the party needs to work hard in the hills to strengthen the organisation. Winning in 32 seats seems a warning call for the BJP. We must work as a team to penetrate the tribal belt in the next five years.”

Tipra Motha leader Animesh Debbarma, who won the election from the Asharambar Assembly seat, claimed the party fought the election without any ally and created history as no regional party has won so many seats in the 60-member Assembly before.

In the late eighties, Tripura Upajati Yuba Samity (TUJS) contested the election with Congress and won eight seats while the IPFT also won the same number of seats in the 2018 Assembly elections, he claimed.

“Our target was to position us as a determining factor in government formation but the BJP secured a simple majority. We did well in the elections and it will be an inspiration for regional parties in the northeast how a regional party could fight the election and secure a good number of seats,” Debbarma, who is also the deputy chief executive member (CEM) of Tripura Tribal Areas Autonomous District Council (TTAADC), told PTI.

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