Former Security Officials and Left Veteran's Daughter Join BJP Ahead of Bengal Polls

Former Security Officials and Left Veteran's Daughter Join BJP Ahead of Bengal Polls.webp

Kolkata, February 17 Ahead of the high-stakes West Bengal Assembly election, the BJP on Tuesday inducted several prominent figures, including a former NSG commando, a retired CRPF officer, and the daughter of a former Left Front minister, in a move seen as part of its broader pre-poll consolidation drive.

The induction programme, held at the party's state headquarters in Kolkata, was attended by Leader of the Opposition Suvendu Adhikari, state BJP president Samik Bhattacharya, and other senior leaders.

Among those who joined were former NSG commander Dipanjan Chakraborty, retired CRPF DSP Biplab Biswas, and Kasturi Goswami, daughter of the late former RSP leader and minister Kshiti Goswami. Party leaders described the induction as an attempt to broaden the BJP's social and political reach ahead of the elections.

Chakraborty is a popular figure in Bengali media channels, speaking on various aspects of national security.

Kasturi Goswami's entry drew particular political attention, given her family's long association with Left politics.

Her sister, Basundhara Goswami, had earlier joined the Trinamool Congress and currently serves as a councillor in the Kolkata Municipal Corporation, a contrast that has sparked discussion in political circles about shifting loyalties within Bengal's older ideological families.

The latest induction comes as the BJP intensifies preparations for the Assembly election, hoping to regain momentum after falling short in 2021 despite emerging as the principal opposition.

In that election, the TMC won 213 seats while the BJP secured 77, marking a dramatic rise for the saffron party but not enough to dislodge Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee.

With 294 seats at stake, both parties have begun aggressive organizational activity, with the BJP attempting to project a broader coalition of security veterans, former bureaucrats, and defectors from rival political camps.

The TMC, however, has often dismissed such events as electoral optics, arguing that individual joinings rarely alter ground-level equations in a state where welfare politics and local networks remain decisive.

As the countdown to the polls begins, political observers expect further high-profile inductions across camps.

The West Bengal BJP leadership believes that such moves, combined with larger mobilization programs planned in the coming weeks, could help sustain a narrative of momentum against the ruling party.
 
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bengal politics bjp crpf officers electoral politics kolkata mamata banerjee national security nsg commandos political campaigns political inductions samik bhattacharya suvendu adhikari trinamool congress west bengal west bengal assembly election
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