Media's Tryst With Mamata Banerjee
1st Woman to hold the office of the CM of West Bengal |
Mamata Banerjee's name has been etched in the
history of India among those leaders, whose presence have been mile stones in
India politics, whether you like it or not. Her name, preceded with an oft -
repeated adjective, mercurial, is doing the media round yet again for her not
so benevolent comments against the judiciary. Only a short while back was she
lampooned for arresting a poor farmer, who dared to ask her a question, after
branding him a Maoist. True, the lady has become one of a kind, with her
almost-cartoon-like behaviour. Talk about cartoons, she doesn't like that even.
When "Didi" came into prominence, bombarding the Left Bastion that Kolkata used
to be, the western media celebrated, may be a bit more than our own. Be it her
impractical diktat of talking to anyone from the
Left, leave alone marrying them; or walking out from a talk show (which, later on, was completed by the
juvenile journalist at Banerjee’s residence), her stint as the West Bengal CM, has
been nothing but a diwali pataka of impractical blunders that doesn’t seem to
stop and even if she tries (which I don’t think she does) to stop, the media
may not leave her alone.
The Hindu : Mamata sees reds in TV studio, wants probe |
But
the excessive negativity, almost akin to a witch hunt, if not in a manner that
is reserved only for Narendra Modi, reeks of some conspiracy and wretchedness.
That the media is not holier-than-thou has been proved ample amount of times by
various netizens and their own activities (Radia Tape, Fake Live Interview et
al.) That the media is filled with Left Leaning bigots is also something which
needs no introduction to. Hence one cannot but wonder, if this ridicule that
the Hon. West Bengal Chief Minister is being meted out is in some way a
deliberate attempt to show her in a poor light.
But
yet, when our anchors present these to the unassuming audience with a smirk; every
time such laughable and sometimes dangerously serious incidents crop up around
Ms. Banerjee; I wonder, how at the ground level, the CM is perceived. West Bengal
is one of the poorest states in India having a BPL population of 48% as per the
state's calculation, and 28% as per that of the Centre. Link
1 Link2
Do these significant chunks of population actually bother about what their Chief
Minister had commented on the Judiciary? Will they be more worried about what
Didi tells her party men about Communists or will they be worried about the
next day’s meal? It is a bit naive to assume that such incidents, which, sadly, does give
away streaks of autocracy, will be affecting a poor farmer or an ordinary house-wife struggling with the rising costs of vegetables or a
girl who is not able to go to school simply because her parents could not afford
it. They cannot even begin to care what the elitist English news channels talk
about the Chief Minister; because it is ridiculous to imagine that any one will
be ready to watch the anchors jabbering off into oblivion, in those precious
moments when there is no power
cut.
True,
I don’t think that she is the best thing that happened to West Bengal. I don’t
even think she is a good CM. She is average, just like our Prime Minister. She
talks a lot, he doesn’t – that sums up the difference in their performance.
Hence to put the woman under this much scrutiny, for every single sentence she
utters and then to make it the topic of discussion of FTN and TBSH is venomous
and intentional. May be, the fact that the last vestige of the horrendous ideology
of Communist parties has broken down and shattered, is not being accepted by
the pseudo intelligentsia and the cheap thugs, the Left now comprises of. Or maybe
it is that she is just not cool enough for the media, like Mr. Omar Abdullah is
whose performance as a CM had met a tragic demise long ago.
India Today - Nielson Poll |
If
the recent India Today – Nielson Mood of the Nation polls is anything to go by,
Mamata Banerjee’s popularity has not only been unaffected by these negative
news, on the contrary she has gained significant good will of her people, now being voted 3rd
most popular Chief Minister, only behind the obvious choices of Narendra
Modi and Nitish Kumar and above Jayalalithaa's conspicuously low ranking. She has thus kept her account strong and safe in West
Bengal, despite her hugely impractical and and some times childish and a bit autocratic
decisions. I am of the personal view that anything which keeps the farce that
Communists have become now is good. Not to forget is the fact that, this is a
woman who has been a street fighter politician since she became active in
politics. May be she was meant to perpetually continue in that role, a reason
why she might have participated in rallies
conducted against the policies of her own governments! May be she is not
talking, how a CM should. But when I see the drama played out by our “sensitive”
ruling party MPs over being called “illegitimate” or the hoopla created out of
a boring cartoon, or the indignation paraded by our honourable representatives
when Team Anna called them corrupt, I do not mind a Chief Minister, who at the
worst is overtly emotional and short tempered. That is last of India’s trouble.