Kolkata: With the red flag fluttering alongside the Congress tricolour, an ailing former West Bengal chief minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee on Tuesday hit the campaign trail leading a huge road show in support of CPI-M candidates through the city’s southern outskirts. Attired in his trademark kurta and dhoti, Bhattacharjee rode an open jeep flanked by party candidates from Tollygunge, Jadavpur and Kasba constituencies, as thousands of Left Front and Congress workers and supporters enthusiastically joined in. They sang, shouted slogans parodying the Trinamool Congress and exuding confidence of the Left and democratic forces forming the next government. [caption id=“attachment_2739064” align=“alignleft” width=“380”]
A file photo of Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee. AFP[/caption] Bhattacharjee, a patient of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, had kept away from the heat and dust of the campaign so far following his doctors’ advice not to undertake long travels, despite requests from all party district units to lead the election campaign. However, party sources said he was spending long hours at the party headquarters in Alimuddin Street, supervising the nitty gritties of the campaign, coining the slogans, and playing a major role in deciding venues of election meetings and the state level speakers. Now an invitee to the Communist Party of India-Marxist’s policy-making body politburo, Bhattacharjee is also regarded as one of the architects of the Left Front-Congress tie-up, and was largely instrumental from behind the wings in ensuring the central committee nod for the poll understanding between the two long-time foes. But with the poll caravan now moving on to the doorsteps of the city, Bhattacharjee agreed to join the public campaign. He seemed more aged, with all grey hair, but seemed spurred on by the huge turnout, as he chatted with the party’s young candidate from Kasba, Shataroop Ghosh, and Sujon Chakraborty, a state secretariat member and contestant from Jadavpur. Another young nominee, Students’ Federation of India leader Madhuja Sen Roy, in the fray from Tollygunge, seemed somewhat awed by Bhattacharjee’s presence. The rally, that started off from the base of the Dhakuria Bridge at 5.15 p.m. with several thousand participants, swelled in size as Left supporters joined in large numbers on the way. At various points, even common people were seen walking a few steps with the rallyists.
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