Think the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), West Bengal, and a few names flash in your mind: Kailash Vijayvargiya, general secretary minding the state, Mukul Roy, a former confidant of Trinamool Congress (TMC) President Mamata Banerjee and now BJP vice-president, Amit Malviya, national IT and social media manager who tweets incessantly about Mamata, and Swapan Dasgupta, who last week quit his Rajya Sabha membership to fight the election from Tarakeshwar.
The canvas is also peopled with individuals who, unbeknown to those outside the BJP, pull the strings. “They are our go-to men, our trouble-shooters. They draw their strength from remaining low-key and accessible only to our workers,” a source said. The movers and shakers span a range of responsibilities: From keeping the organisation in ship-shape and plugging the loopholes, to catching out Mamata when she “trips up” and working on the TMC’s “rebels” and “fence-sitters”.
Barring exceptions, the “go-to” men are rooted in the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) and its student front, the Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad (ABVP), and have since moved to the BJP organisation. Shishir Bajoria, an industrialist who was in the CPI(M), is an outlier to make it to the state BJP’s inner circle.
Who are these silent operators? Among the significant ones are:
Arvind Menon: Guruvayur-born Menon is Vijayvargiya’s back-up person who was put to test in West Bengal in the 2019 Lok Sabha polls by Amit Shah, the then BJP president. Menon travelled without security and was allegedly attacked by TMC workers a few times, including once at a Siliguri hotel where he was addressing BJP workers. Central security forces reportedly moved him to safety. Menon remained so low that he didn’t open a social media account until recently and did not prefix “Chowkidar” before his name, unlike his BJP peers, for fear of drawing the TMC’s attention.
Menon, who speaks Bangla fluently because of an earlier stint in West Bengal, spent his time in villages before the last Lok Sabha polls, and stayed at the homes of BJP sympathisers to create rural networks. His “silent” operation was codenamed “Chup chaap, Kamal chaap (vote the lotus without making a noise)”. Among Menon’s purported “achievements” was enlisting CPI(M) workers to augment the BJP’s workforce. He’s currently a national secretary, a post he worked hard for, because in the years he spent in Madhya Pradesh as organisational general secretary, he was identified with Chief Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan. In 2016, Shah moved him to Delhi.
Amitava Chakraborty: He was the major beneficiary when the state BJP organisation was shuffled in October 2020. Chakraborty replaced Subrata Chattopadhayay as general secretary (organisation), a coveted post in the BJP. The decision was interpreted as a way of clipping the wings of the state party president, Dilip Ghosh, who Chattopadhayay was close to. A graduate from the Balurghat College in South Dinajpur, Chakraborty moved to Kolkata in 1990. After doing a spell as an RSS pracharak, he was inducted into the ABVP. In 2000, he organised the ABVP’s first major demonstration on Bankim Chatterjee Street, opposite the Sanskrit College, where the assemblage raised Vande Mataram and Bharat Mata ki Jai slogans in a big way for the first time in Kolkata. Chakraborty came into the BJP in 2016. He reportedly “worked hard” to propagate the Centre’s welfare schemes among the urban and rural poor and played a role in crafting the BJP’s Sonar Bangla campaign theme.