Rival Kerala fronts get restless over poll date
Even though they have hit the campaign trail for the by-poll to the Chengannur Assembly constituency, candidates of three rival fronts are getting a bit restless over the suspense of the likely date of the polls.
The by-election was necessitated by the death of Communist Party of India (CPI-M) legislator KK Ramachandran Nair in January. Chengannur constituency falls in Alappuzha district, considered the bastion of the CPI-M-led Left Front, which has eight of nine Assembly seats here under its belt. Expectations were high that the date would be announced along with the schedule for the Karnataka assembly polls, but it was not to be.
Contrary to what is often seen in Kerala, this time the Congress was the first to announce its candidate-D Vijayakumar, a party veteran born and brought up in Chengannur, who has been eyeing this seat for the past quarter of a century. Soon CPI-M named Alappuzha district party secretary Saji Cheriyan. And the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), on expected lines, has named another local personality and the former state party chief PS Sreedharan Pillai, who in the 2016 Assembly polls put up an unexpectedly strong showing and came a close third.
The NDA is still trying to put its house in order as the second biggest ally, the Bharat Dharma Jana Sena (BDJS), the political arm of the SNDP, an organisation that works predominantly for the backward Ezhavas, is feeling disgruntled.
The BDJS is said to be unhappy with the BJP as it is yet to get the posts "promised" to it when it decided to join the NDA in 2015. However, although the poll date is yet to be announced, all three candidates have begun their campaigns which includes house visits, family get-togethers, besides holding of wayside meetings. Over the past two days, all the three candidates made it a point to be present in churches in the constituency during the "Passion Week" prayer sessions. And they made it to Easter Sunday mass as well.
The star campaigner of the UDF is none other than former chief minister Oommen Chandy. He is spending most of his time in the constituency trying to build bridges with the strong Christian community, which for some reason is believed to have taken an anti-Congress stand in the 2016 assembly election in which the party lost to the Left Front.
BJP candidate Pillai, however, said that it was understandable that his rival candidates have openly expressed their reservations on the delay in announcing the poll dates. Cheriyan, the CPI-M candidate, said: "We waiting to hear the election date, as we can then plan the campaign in detail. Hopefully, there will not be any more delay in knowing the date of the poll." By: Sanu George