
New Delhi/Thiruvananthapuram, July 14 (IANS) For the first time since the Left Democratic Front’s crushing defeat in the Kerala Assembly elections, the CPI-M national leadership has publicly acknowledged that mistakes were made in the party’s electoral strategy, particularly in the selection of candidates.
Emerging from the party’s three-day Central Committee meeting in New Delhi, CPI-M General Secretary M.A. Baby on Tuesday stopped short of naming individuals but made it clear that the party was undertaking a serious introspection following its worst Assembly performance in decades.
Without directly taking on names, Baby said the conduct of every party member had a bearing on the organisation’s image and electoral fortunes.
“The behaviour of every comrade affects the party,” he remarked, signalling that accountability would extend beyond organisational decisions to the actions of individual leaders.
Baby said the CPI-M’s Central Committee had held an extensive review of the Kerala poll results and agreed that there had been errors of judgement in candidate selection and also wanted the behavior of all to improve.
He announced that an extended State Committee meeting would be convened in September to carry forward a more detailed discussion and implement corrective measures.
“What’s going to be discussed then cannot be said now,” Baby added.
The Assembly poll debacle, however, was not an isolated setback.
Warning signs had begun appearing in the 2024 Lok Sabha elections, when the Left was reduced to just one of Kerala’s 20 Parliamentary seats.
Instead of undertaking a comprehensive organisational review, the party maintained that it would regain public confidence.
The downward trend continued in the local body elections held last December, where the CPI-M-led LDF suffered another severe reversal.
Even then, the CPI-M leadership said that the poll setbacks were temporary and launched an extensive public outreach and image-building campaign ahead of the recently concluded Assembly polls.
The strategy failed to arrest the slide.
The LDF was reduced to just 35 seats in the 140-member Kerala Assembly, its poorest showing in decades.
The poll result has also left the Front without the numbers required to elect even a single Rajya Sabha member from Kerala, where a candidate requires the support of at least 36 MLAs.
The present admission marks a significant shift in the CPI-M’s approach after months of insisting that the electoral setbacks were temporary and largely the result of external factors.
With the Central Committee now openly acknowledging lapses and promising corrective measures, the focus shifts to whether the September review will produce substantive organisational changes or merely another round of introspection.
For the CPI-M, the challenge is no longer just recovering lost ground in Kerala but preventing a prolonged decline reminiscent of the erosion of its once-dominant position in states such as West Bengal and Tripura.
–IANS
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