Madan Mitra quits Mamata faction, joins Ritabrata Banerjee's rebel TMC camp
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Kamarhati MLA Madan Mitra, once among the most trusted loyalists of All India Trinamool Congress (TMC) chief Mamata Banerjee, on Wednesday, 15 July formally resigned from all posts in the Mamata-led faction and crossed over to the rival rebel camp headed by Leader of the Opposition Ritabrata Banerjee in the West Bengal Assembly. The move ends days of speculation and delivers another significant blow to the Mamata Banerjee-led faction of the party.
What Mitra Said at the Assembly
Seated alongside Ritabrata Banerjee inside the West Bengal Assembly, Mitra announced his resignation from every organisational post he held in the original Trinamool Congress. He trained his sharpest criticism on TMC general secretary Abhishek Banerjee, holding him responsible for what he described as the party's decline.
'I was with the Trinamool, and I remain in the Trinamool. I have only moved from one house to another. The party does not belong to one individual; it belongs to everyone,' Mitra said. He also recited a two-line poem and declared, 'I am not just a Trinamool MLA, I am an MLA of Bengal. I gave up everything for the Trinamool. All the positions I had, I gave up everything.'
Despite the switch, Mitra expressed gratitude towards Mamata Banerjee, acknowledging that she had stood by party workers for a long time. He confirmed he would attend the rebel faction's Martyrs' Day programme in Kolkata on 21 July.
The ED Summons That Preceded the Shift
The defection came a day after the Enforcement Directorate (ED) summoned Mitra's wife and sons in connection with its money-laundering probe into the alleged municipal recruitment scam in West Bengal. Following the summons, Mitra met former TMC MLA Swarna Kamal Saha at the residence of rebel faction MLA Sandipan Saha in central Kolkata, fuelling speculation about an imminent change of allegiance.
Notably, Mitra drove himself to the Assembly earlier in the day before proceeding to Ritabrata Banerjee's office — a sequence that underscored the deliberateness of the move.
Scale of the Defection Wave
Mitra's departure is the latest in a cascading defection crisis for the Mamata Banerjee-led faction following the party's split in the wake of its West Bengal Assembly election defeat. According to reports, more than 60 MLAs had already joined the rebel camp led by Ritabrata Banerjee, with only a handful remaining with Mamata Banerjee.
Senior leaders who had held significant positions in the Mamata-led faction — including Firhad Hakim, Chandrima Bhattacharya, and Jyoti Priya Mallick — had already crossed over before Mitra's move. His defection adds one of the most prominent names yet to that list.
Who Madan Mitra Was in the Party
Mitra had been entrusted with several critical organisational responsibilities within the Mamata-led faction: president of the Dumdum-Barrackpore organisational district, head of the party's hawkers' wing, and chief convenor of its legislative party. Losing a leader with that portfolio depth signals that the Mamata faction's organisational infrastructure in key parts of West Bengal is under serious strain.
With Mitra's defection, the rebel camp has now consolidated a commanding majority of the party's elected legislators, raising sharper questions about the viability of the Mamata-led faction ahead of the 21 July Martyrs' Day rallies — an annual political litmus test in Bengal.