Mukul Roy, His Son Make 'Ghar Wapsi' As Duo Formally Rejoins TMC In Mamata's Presence
Mukul Roy Joins TMC: BJP National Vice President Mukul Roy has joined the Trinamool Congress. This important development comes after Several turncoat politicians, who switched from TMC to BJP expressed regret over their decision to quit the ruling party.
Kolkata: In a major setback for the saffron party, Bharatiya Janata Party's National Vice President Mukul Roy has joined the Trinamool Congress along with son Subhranshu Roy.
Prior to this, Mukul Roy reached the Trinamool Bhawan in Kolkata where West Bengal CM and TMC supremo Mamata Banerjee held a meeting with senior party leaders. Abhishek Banerjee was also present there.
Several turncoat politicians, who switched from TMC to BJP ahead of recently held assembly polls, have expressed regret over their decision to quit the ruling party.
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"I have joined TMC today. In the present circumstances, no one will stay in Bharatiya Janata Party," Mukul Roy said during the TMC press conference.
He was welcomed by supremo Mamata Banerjee who stated that "he will play an important role in the party".
Will Rajib Banerjee Follow Suit?
This important development comes after the absence of three BJP heavyweights Mukul Roy, Shamik Bhattacharya and Rajib Banerjee at the recent meeting of the party's West Bengal unit garnered a lot of attention sparking rumours. TMC MP and Mamata Banerjee’s Nephew Abhishek Banerjee had recently visited Mukul Roy's ailing wife in hospital.
BJP's Bengal unit had held a high-powered organisational meeting where party leaders were required to be physically present.
Speaking on the absence of the three BJP leaders, Joy Prakash Majumdar, Vice-President, West Bengal BJP, said: "BJP National Vice President Mukul Roy could not attend the meeting as his wife is unwell and is in a hospital. On the day the meeting was scheduled, Bengal BJP chief spokesperson Shamik Bhattacharya's father died of Covid and so he could not attend the meeting. Rajib Banerjee could not attend due to personal reasons".
Rajib Banerjee had recently said that people elected the government, referring to the TMC which returned to power with a resounding mandate, and added that they will not take it well if the threat of imposing the president's rule is constantly dangled to oppose the chief minister.
"Enough with the criticism. The people elected the government with a majority, they will not take it well if the threat of Section 365 is constantly dangled to oppose the chief minister," Rajib Banerjee had tweeted.
Commenting on Rahul Banerjee's tweet, Majumdar said that the BJP does not support this stance.
"It is completely his personal opinion and in no way the BJP at the state and national level supports his statement. Whatever stand Rajib Banerjee has taken, it is completely his personal opinion," Majumdar said.
The West Bengal BJP Vice-President went on to add that the leaders, who want to go back to Trinamool Congress, are greedy for power.
"It is their primary right. Those who want to go to their old party can go back. They can decide whether they want to stay with this party and work for the people or go to the party from where they came. They want to go back to Trinamool Congress because they are greedy for power."
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When Mukul Roy Moved To BJP
Mukul Roy was a founder-member of the TMC after it the fraction broke away from the Indian National Congress in 1988. In 2015, he and Mamata Banerjee had a fallout when his name came up in the Saradha scam and the Narada sting operation
Mukul Roy then met senior BJP leaders like Arun Jaitley and BJP general secretary Kailash Vijayvargiya and was suspended from TMC for six years. He resigned from Trinamool Congress in September 2017 and formally joined the Bharatiya Janata Party in November that year.
After a lot of reports and speculations, Rajib Banerjee left the TMC in January this year to contest the West Bengal assembly election on a BJP ticket.
Several leaders including Suvendu Adhikari, who once was a close aid of Mamata Banerjee, joined the BJP ahead of the state assembly election. BJP lost the polls but emerged as the second-largest party with 77 seats in the 294-member state assembly. Trinamool Congress registered a landslide victory winning 213 seats.
Suvendu Adhikari, who went on to defeat Mamata in the contest for Nandigram, was chosen as the leader of opposition.
(With Agency Inputs)