EC tells TMC to 'get lost'; war of words erupt on election eve
TMC met EC amid West Bengal polls over alleged disenfranchisement in SIR and claims of tacit BJP ties.
PTI
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Derek O'Brien, Sagarika Ghose, Saket Gokhale and Menaka Guruswamy after a meeting between TMC delegation and the Election Commission of India (ANI)
New Delhi, 8 April
A Trinamool Congress delegation's meeting with the Election Commission on Wednesday ended on an acrimonious note, with the leaders saying the Chief Election Commissioner asked them to "get lost" and the commission accusing them of "shouting".
A TMC
delegation -- comprising its Rajya Sabha leader Derek O'Brien, deputy leader
Sagarika Ghose, MPs Saket Gokhale and Menaka Guruswamy -- met the full bench of the Election Commission as West Bengal goes to polls amid charges of
disenfranchisements after the Special Intensive Revision of electoral rolls,
and allegations of the poll body having a "tacit understanding" with
the BJP.
Talking to
reporters after the meeting, O'Brien said they handed over nine letters written
by West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee to Chief Election Commissioner
(CEC) Gyanesh Kumar, which the MP said have not been acknowledged.
They also
apprised the Election Commission of specific instances showing certain poll
officials' alleged links with the BJP, and demanded that they be transferred.
"We
gave him six examples of officials who are part of the election process and
have links with the BJP," O'Brien said.
Among the
examples cited was that of the Chief Electoral Officer being accompanied by a
local BJP leader in Nandigram. A memorandum was submitted in this regard, he
said.
"We
asked the CEC how he can ensure the conduct of free and fair elections when
such tainted officers are being appointed in Bengal. To this, his answer was
Get lost," said O'Brien.
"We
told the CEC we would not listen to him because he does not allow his
colleagues to speak. We have attended eight to nine meetings like this, where
none other than the CEC speaks," O'Brien said.
At the end
of the seven-minute meeting, a TMC leader congratulated Gyanesh Kumar on being
the first CEC in history to have notices seeking his removal submitted in
Parliament, O'Brien said.
The
Election Commission, meanwhile, accused the TMC leaders of "shouting"
and said it will ensure free and fair elections in the state.
In an X
post, the poll panel said it gave a "straight talk" to the TMC
delegation.
EC said it
told the TMC that "this time, the elections in West Bengal would surely
be: fear-free, violence-free, intimidation-free, inducement-free and without
any 'chappa, booth-jamming and source-jamming' (electoral malpractices)".
EC sources
accused O'Brien of shouting at the election commissioners and said that he
asked the CEC not to speak.
"The
CEC requested Derek O'Brien to maintain decorum in the commission room.
Shouting and indecent behaviour are not appropriate," they said.
According
to a source who was present at the meeting, as soon as the TMC delegation
entered the meeting, the CEC pointed out the absence of their authorised
representative, to which O'Brien asked if they were "unauthorised"
and should leave.
After
submitting their memorandum, the TMC leaders told the CEC that they did not
want just words, but action on ground.
The CEC
accused O'Brien of speaking loudly and told them to "get lost",
sources said.
The TMC
leaders have also taken to X, rejecting EC's claims.
In a post,
Sagarika Ghose called the poll panel's claim a "blatant lie" and
said, "none of this was said to the four-member delegation".
"Two
lines were said to us by the Chief Election Commissioner, Vanish' Kumar. The
first line: where is your authorised signatory. And the second most shameful
two words: 'get lost'," Ghose said.
In his
post, Saket Gokhale accused the EC of singling out one political party.
"ECI
official handle tweets, singling out one political party. Does this criminal
CEC have the guts to tweet saying 'straight talk to BJP'?" he asked.
Tagging
the EC's post, the TMC wrote on its X handle, "Straight-talk to ECI: Is
this how a neutral constitutional body is expected to behave?"
In another post, the party said, "We are also speaking straight to the Election Commission straightforwardly. This time, the elections must be: free from Delhi's control, free from political bias, free from targeted persecution of anyone, and certainly free from double standards."
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