The section within the CPM, who are against the continuing seat-sharing agreement with Congress, has highlighted two points in favour of this argument.

Kolkata: Dissent is growing within the CPM-led Left Front in West Bengal over whether to continue its seat-sharing arrangement with the Congress for next year’s Assembly elections. The alliance’s future has come under sharper scrutiny after Congress’s poor performance in the Bihar Assembly polls.
"Till now, mainly the two allies of the Left Front, namely All India Forward Bloc and the Revolutionary Socialist Party, had been objecting to the continued seat-sharing arrangement with Congress for the 2026 West Bengal Assembly polls. But now, after the Bihar Assembly results, questions have also started surfacing from within CPM on the justification of continuing the seat-sharing arrangement with Congress in 2026," a state CPM Central committee member requesting anonymity, said.
The section within the CPM who are against the continuing seat-sharing agreement with Congress has highlighted two points in favour of this argument.
First, this section within CPM feels that the tally of MGB in the recently concluded Bihar Assembly polls could have been a bit better, had Congress's Central leadership not 'arm-twisted' in contesting from as many as 61 seats in the Bihar polls, and instead allowed other MGB allies with better prospects to contest from some of these seats.
Secondly, this section feels that CPM, being a regimented political force, might be able to mobilise its voters for Congress in case of a seat-sharing agreement; there is no guarantee that Congress leadership would be able to do the same in return.
"As it is, the seat-sharing arrangement between Congress for the 2026 West Bengal Assembly polls had been uncertain since the beginning, because of the absence of two architects of similar seat-sharing arrangements in the party, one being our former party General secretary, late Sitaram Yechury, and the other being the former State Congress President, Adhir Ranjan Chowdhury. Neither our present national leadership nor the current state Congress leadership seems to be keen to carry forward the seat-sharing arrangement in 2026," the CPM Central committee member said.
The seat-sharing arrangement between the Left Front and Congress started in the 2016 West Bengal Assembly polls.
However, there was no such arrangement in the 2019 Lok Sabha polls.
However, the seat-sharing arrangement prevailed both in the 2021 West Bengal Assembly elections as well as in the 2024 Lok Sabha polls. IANS
Published: 15 Nov 2025, 09:33 pm IST
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