Left Front-led Alliance | |
|---|---|
| Abbreviation | LF+ |
| Leader | Mohammed Salim |
| Founded | 2026 |
| Preceded by | Mahajot (2016) Sanjukta Morcha (2021) Secular Democratic Alliance (2024) |
| Political position | Left-wing [a] |
| Colours | Red |
| Lok Sabha | 0 / 42 |
| Rajya Sabha | 0 / 16 |
| West Bengal Legislative Assembly | 1 / 294 |
| Gram Panchayats | 3,785 / 63,229 |
| Panchayat Samitis | 196 / 9,730 |
| Zilla Parishads | 3 / 928 |
| Municipalities | 1 / 108 |
[a] | |
Left Front-led Alliance (abbr.LF+) [1] [2] [3] is a political alliance led by the Left Front in the Indian state of West Bengal in opposition to the Trinamool Congress (TMC) and the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). [4]
Following the heavy defeats in the 2011 Legislative Assembly election and the 2014 general election, the CPI(M) had welcomed ideas of the alliance even with non-communist parties. The first signs came when in the Siliguri municipal election, CPI(M) made some local understanding with INC resulting in CPI(M) leader Ashok Bhattacharya being appointed as the mayor. This success got popularity as the "Siliguri Model". [5] After the success of the model, in the long run, some Congress and CPI(M) leader advocated for a Left-Congress alliance. [6] This gradually materialized into "alliance" between INC and Left Front. The precedence of the Left Front providing outside support to the UPA-I government in 2004-2008 was cited in support. [7]
Given the political history of West Bengal, the materialisation of an alliance between the Congress & the CPI(M), 2 parties that have been bitter rivals of each other since the 1970s & have a history of unleashing political violence against each other's cadres, took the political circles of the state by surprise. After much dispute and secession of 2 far-left groups : SUCI(C) and CPI(ML)L, from the Left Front, both Congress and the Communists formed an understanding basis of what they called "seat-sharing", strongly objecting to the use of the word "alliance".[ citation needed ]
In 2016, Mahajot [8] [9] [10] was formed on the broad agreement that some political parties proposed before the 2016 West Bengal Legislative Assembly election for fighting against the Trinamool Congress government in West Bengal and the Bharatiya Janata Party on national level. Left Front consisting of CPI(M), CPI, RSP, AIFB and DSP along with INC released their respective candidate list in several rounds after consultations and bargaining. [11] [12] However, the alliance failed to gain the majority seats in the assembly elections. [13] [14] Afterwards, ahead of 2019 Indian general election, the alliance between the Congress and the Left Front is off the cards as both camps could not agree on a seat-sharing formula for Lok Sabha elections, especially in the Raiganj and Murshidabad seats, where the incumbent MP was from CPI(M) but the MLAs of the constituent legislative assembly seats were mostly from the Congress. [15] [16]
Subsequently, Mahajot succeeded to Sanjukta Morcha [17] in 2021 with the joining of ISF in the alliance. Despite a spirited campaign, both the Left Front and the Indian National Congress drew a blank in the election with a considerable decrease in their respective vote shares. That was the first time when, the West Bengal Legislative Assembly was devoid of any MLA from Left Front or Congress. [18]
Afterwards, ahead of 2024 Indian general election, ISF decided to contest alone in the Lok Sabha polls due to some differences in seat sharing and marks the end of alliance with Left and Congress. [19] Thereafter, Sanjukta Morcha succeeded to LF–INC Alliance [20] or Secular Democratic Alliance. On 29 March 2024 hill-based Indian Gorkha Janshakti Front president Ajoy Edwards joined hands with the alliance for a short period of time to take on both the BJP and the TMC in Darjeeling Lok Sabha polls. [21] The alliance won only 1 seat (Maldaha Dakshin) out of the 42 it contested. Afterwards, ahead of 2026 West Bengal Legislative Assembly election Indian National Congress decided to fight alone in the polls marking the end of LF–INC Alliance. [22] [23] On the other hand, Left Front kept uniting other smaller left parties and other 'secular', 'democratic' forces and fractions together forming a broader alliance. [24] Later on, ISF once again joined the alliance led by CPI(M)-led Left Front. [25]
Past Members
| Party | Flag | Political position | Ideology | Leader(s) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| INC | Indian National Congress | | Centre-left | Subhankar Sarkar | ||
| IGJF | Indian Gorkha Janshakti Front | | Gurkha nationalism Gorkhaland statehood Social democracy Regionalism | Ajoy Edwards | ||
| Election Year | Overall Votes | % of overall votes | Total seats | Seats won | +/- in seats | +/- in vote share |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2026 | TBD | |||||