Bengal Elections: Does BJP's charge of TMC being anti-women hold?
The battle for West Bengal is shaping up as a high-stakes, largely bipolar contest between the TMC and the BJP, with Mamata Banerjee emerging as the lone woman challenger in a direct and intense face-off with the BJP’s top leadership.The campaign narrative has swung across issues, from Babri Masjid and infiltration to even fish politics, but women’s empowerment has now taken centre stage. Prime Minister Narendra Modi has sharpened his pitch, targeting the TMC as an “anti-women” party while urging voters to shift support to the BJP. His attack follows the failure of the 131st Amendment Bill related to women’s reservation, with the Prime Minister accusing opposition parties of undermining women’s rights.But does the charge hold up? The data paints a more layered picture. While the TMC has the highest proportion of women MPs in Parliament, the BJP leads in absolute numbers. At the state level, however, women’s representation remains limited, and the issue becomes even more complex when factoring in candidates facing charges related to crimes against women.As both parties compete to win over women voters, a deeper question emerges: Is women’s empowerment in this election about representation, or about accountability and real change on the ground? And will Bengal once again rally behind Banerjee’s “maa, mati, manush” pitch, or will the BJP finally break into a political stronghold that has held firm for over 15 years?
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