Documents from TMC MLA meetings at Mamata's residence surface online
The documents cover the 6 May & 19 May meetings held during TMC's fight for Opposition leadership after its defeat.
PTI
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TMC's post-poll rift deepened as rival factions intensified their battle over legitimacy and control (PTI)
Kolkata, 6 June
A fresh twist emerged in the battle for the leadership of the TMC legislature party on Saturday after documents purportedly relating to two meetings of party MLAs at Mamata Banerjee's Kalighat residence surfaced on social media, prompting rebel Leader of Opposition Ritabrata Banerjee to question their authenticity.
The
documents pertain to meetings held on 6 May and 19 May amid the escalating
struggle for control of the opposition space in the West Bengal Assembly
following the TMC's defeat in the 2026 elections.
According
to the records, 67 MLAs attended the 6 May meeting at 30B Harish Chatterjee
Street, where signatures of legislators were seen alongside the names of their
constituencies and the date.
While most
legislators signed in Bengali or English, some names were written in block
letters.
Among
those whose names appeared in block letters were MLAs Subhasis Das, Chandranath
Sinha, Dinen Roy and Baharul Islam, according to the documents.
The papers
described the 6 May gathering as a meeting convened for the election of the
leader of the opposition, deputy leader and chief whip of the TMC legislature
party.
The
records stated that former Kolkata mayor Firhad Hakim presided over the meeting
and that the proposal for electing the legislature party leader was unanimously
approved by those present.
The
documents further claimed that legislators who could not attend had also
conveyed their support.
Another
set of records relating to the 19 May meeting carried signatures of 59 TMC
legislators.
The
emergence of the documents comes at a time when the Mamata Banerjee camp and
the rebel faction are locked in a fierce contest over the legitimacy of rival
claims to the leadership of the party's legislature wing, a battle that has
already spilt into the assembly and investigating agencies.
PTI,
however, couldn't independently verify the authenticity of these documents.
The
controversy centres around allegations that signatures of certain MLAs were
forged in documents submitted to the assembly Speaker during the tussle over
the leadership of the opposition bloc.
MLAs
Ritabrata Banerjee and Sandeepan Saha had earlier complained to the assembly
authorities, alleging forgery, following which the state government entrusted
the investigation to the CID.
The agency
has already collected handwriting samples from several legislators as part of
the probe.
Reacting
to the documents, Banerjee said the matter was under investigation and
refrained from making detailed comments.
"Handwriting
experts can examine the documents. The tower locations of legislators present
on those dates can also be verified. The ongoing investigation into the
signature forgery allegations will now have more material to examine," he
said.
The rebel
leader also questioned whether the documents were attendance sheets or
nomination papers relating to the election of the leader of the opposition.
"If
these were indeed the nomination documents, is this what was submitted before
the Speaker? The colour of the first two pages and the third page does not
match. Moreover, the third page carries no signatures," Banerjee claimed.
A rebel
TMC MLA, requesting anonymity, claimed that two separate signatures had been
taken from legislators during the 19 May meeting.
"One
was for attendance. Besides that, signatures had earlier been taken during the 6 May meeting in connection with the election of the leader of the
opposition," the MLA claimed.
The latest
controversy has added another layer to the bitter split that has engulfed the
TMC after its assembly election defeat, with rival camps challenging each
other's legitimacy.
The
Speaker's decision to recognise Ritabrata Banerjee as the leader of the
opposition has already triggered legal and political challenges from the Mamata Banerjee camp, while the forgery allegations have opened a parallel
investigative track.
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