Kerala CPI-M shows rare cracks ahead of crucial Central Committee meet

Thiruvananthapuram, July 10 (IANS) For a party that has long prided itself on iron discipline and collective responsibility, the CPI-M in Kerala is witnessing an unusually public display of dissent as its Central Committee meets on Saturday to deliberate on the crushing Assembly election defeat that ended the Left Democratic Front’s decade-long rule in the state.

What began as an internal post-election review has now spilled into the public arena, with senior leaders openly contradicting one another on key issues, fuelling speculation that all is not well within the party’s once tightly knit Kerala unit.

The latest trigger came from Kannur, the ideological citadel of the CPI-M, where differences over the transfer of IAS officer Divya S. Iyer, who headed a major infrastructure project, have exposed an unmistakable lack of cohesion.

While one section of the leadership questioned the circumstances surrounding her transfer, senior leaders E.P. Jayarajan, P.K. Sreemathy, and K.K. Shailaja publicly dismissed the controversy, maintaining that such transfers are routine whenever a new government assumes office.

The rare spectacle of senior leaders taking contradictory positions has assumed greater political significance because it comes close on the heels of the party’s worst electoral setback in Kerala in decades.

Adding to the developments, Thiruvananthapuram District Secretary and MLA V. Joy on Friday sought to play down reports of differences within the party’s capital district unit, asserting that there were no divisions among the leadership there.

His clarification, however, has done little to stem speculation that the discontent runs deeper than the leadership is willing to acknowledge.

The timing is significant.

The Central Committee’s deliberations beginning on Saturday are expected to focus almost entirely on the reasons behind the electoral debacle and the road ahead for the party in Kerala.

Soon after the defeat, CPI-M General Secretary M.A. Baby had urged party members to speak frankly during organisational review meetings and place their criticisms before the leadership without fear or hesitation.

Party insiders say those meetings witnessed some of the sharpest criticism in recent memory, with several leaders openly questioning the functioning of former Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan and state Secretary M.V. Govindan.

Yet, despite the candid discussions, the central leadership chose to retain full confidence in both Vijayan and Govindan, signalling continuity at the top.

The developments unfolding in Kannur have now raised fresh questions over whether the organisational wounds inflicted by the electoral defeat have truly healed.

For a party that has traditionally settled differences behind closed doors before speaking in one voice, the emergence of public contradictions among senior leaders marks a striking departure from convention.

As the Central Committee begins its deliberations, the challenge before the leadership will be as much about restoring organisational cohesion as charting the party’s political revival.

Whether the visible cracks are merely post-defeat tremors or the beginning of a deeper realignment within the Kerala unit is likely to become clearer in the days ahead.

–IANS

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