Election Results 2023 Lok Sabha Assembly Candidate India

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Minor political parties gain importance in Kerala as election come nearer, Kerala assembly polls,left, Communist Marxist Party , Congress-led United Democratic Front, Janathiyapathiya Samreskhena Samithi MV Raghavan, kerala assembly election 2016,kerala

Minor political parties gain importance in Kerala as election come nearer, Kerala assembly polls,left, Communist Marxist Party , Congress-led United Democratic Front, Janathiyapathiya Samreskhena Samithi  MV Raghavan, kerala assembly election 2016,kerala polls 2016

Thiruvananthapuram: With assembly elections round the corner, small political parties in Kerala have begun scrambling for their place in the sun. During elections, they punch much beyond their weight, though remaining irrelevant most of the other times.

Those that would see a rejuvenation in the Congress-led United Democratic Front (UDF), at least in their efforts to attract attention, include the Janathiyapathiya Samreskhena Samithi (JSS) and the Communist Marxist Party (CMP), both of which have split vertically in the last one year, with rival factions of each moving towards the CPI-M led Left Democratic Front( LDF).

But the going is not likely to be easy. Neither of these parties has any representation in the assembly, even after the JSS contested four seats and the CMP three in the 2011 assembly polls.

KK Shaju, who is in the JSS faction in the ruling UDF, said that he had been told by the coalition that it would be difficult to give JSS seats.

“They have said that a seat for me could be considered, but the catch is that I have to join the Congress,” Shaju, who won twice earlier but had lost in the 2011 polls, told .

Another party — Kerala Congress (Pillai) — led by R Balakrishna Pillai — a former minister and one of the founders of the UDF in the early eighties, was given two seats to contest in 2011. It won one. Early this year, following difference with the UDF, the party moved out. But it has not been taken in by the Left Democratic Front (LDF), the other major alliance in the state.

Six-time legislator PC George, who lost his legislatorship last month for defying a directive of his party (Kerala Congress-Mani, an ally of the UDF), has revived his Kerala Congress (Secular). But it is doubtful if he would be accommodated as an ally in the LDF.

A senior leader, who did not want to be named summed up the dilemma: “The small parties are the bane of the fronts. They dominate when the margin between the rival fronts is close. Even a single party legislator has to be made a minister.They win with the votes of the majority party, but run their portfolio as their personal fiefdom.”

There are eight parties in the UDF while the LDF has six with George’s and Pillai’s parties in neither of the fronts.

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