Peoples Democracy newsletter

Peoples Democracy newsletter

Welcome Bail to Kejriwal

CPI(M) Polit Bureau has issued the following statement on May 10, 2024THE Polit Bureau of the CPI(M) welcomes the Supreme Court order granting interim bail to Delhi chief minister Arvind Kejriwal. By doing so, the court has foiled the very purpose of arresting Kejriwal in order to prevent him from participating in the campaign for the Lok Sabha polls.This verdict has exposed the nefarious designs of the Enforcement Directorate and the Modi government.

Narendra Dabholkar Murder Verdict: Incomplete and Unsatisfactory

Below we publish the statement issued by the Maharashtra state committee of CPI(M) on May 10TWO accused, Sachin Andure and Sharad Kalaskar, who shot anti-superstition crusader Dr Narendra Dabholkar dead, have been given a sentence of rigorous life imprisonment by a Special Court in Pune on May 10, 2024. While hailing this verdict, the Maharashtra state committee of the CPI(M) expresses its sense of anguish and dissatisfaction at the prosecution's failure to convince the court of the culpability of the three other accused, viz., Veerendra Tawade, Adv.

Left Youth Brigade Ready for the Big Fight

WHAT has added a whole new dimension to the electoral situation in Bengal is the presence of vibrant young Left candidates in a number of constituencies. The presence of this young brigade in the electoral struggle is very significant to defeat the politics of hatred and strengthen the struggle for establishing a policy-based alternative. Among the young contenders, two former student leaders and one current student leader have caught the attention of all.

Draconian Laws Promoting Authoritarian Rule Should Be Repealed

“A DISSENT in a court of last resort is an appeal to the brooding spirit of law to intelligence of a future day, when a later decision may possibly correct the error into which the dissenting judge believes the court to have been betrayed”.These are the words of justice H R Kanna, made in his dissenting judgment in a five member bench of the Supreme Court in an appeal in 1976.

Bank Workers and the Need for Strengthening the Left in Lok Sabha

THE 18th Lok Sabha election spans seven phases from April 19 to June 1, 2024, with vote counting set for June 4. The upcoming election in India holds great significance and the critical question is who should represent us in parliament to safeguard the country's constitution, democratic principles, and secular values. Here, the bank employees also have to take a definitive side.Data from the Indian Banks Association reveals 7,72,571 employed in public sector banks, from housekeepers to general managers.

Election Commission is under the Lens

THE experience of democracy in India has been largely synonymous with electoral democracy. The principle of ‘for the people, by the people and of the people’ has been manifested through the formation of governments composed of parties and coalitions which command support of the majority of the people. Of all the countries where electoral democracy has been in place after the end of the Second World War and retreat of colonial governments, the principle of electoral majority has remained in course despite strains and even setbacks.

DUJ Condemns Attack on Reporter at a Rally

THE Delhi Union of Journalists (DUJ), in a statement issued on May 13, has   strongly condemned the physical attack on YouTube journalist Raghav Trivedi of Molitics India on May 12, 2024 while covering home minister Amit Shah's election rally in Rae Bareli. The attack was reportedly provoked by Raghav's video recording of a woman who said she and other women had been promised Rs 100 by her village pradhan for attending the rally. Payment for attending rallies is a common, though unfortunate, practice that political parties and candidates often resort to in order to gather a crowd.

Chicanery versus Humanity

THE current protests in US university campuses demanding “divestment” from firms linked to Israel’s military machine, are reminiscent of the protests that had swept these campuses in the late sixties and early seventies demanding an end to the Vietnam war. There is however a major difference: the US had then been directly involved in the war, while today it is not. This had meant a draft then in the US while today there is none, which makes the current student protests completely free of even a shadow of self-interest.

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