K.K. Shailaja warns CPI-M: Kerala defeat no minor setback, course correction urgent
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
CPI-M Central Committee member K.K. Shailaja has delivered a rare and pointed internal critique of her party, describing the Left Democratic Front's rout in the Kerala Assembly elections as a serious setback that demands immediate course correction. Writing in the party's ideological journal 'Chintha', Shailaja cautioned that the Left cannot afford to treat this defeat as a routine electoral reverse.
Scale of the Defeat
The LDF's seat count collapsed from 99 to 35 in the Assembly election — a fall Shailaja described as a major warning sign. Several alliance partners failed to win even a single seat. She also flagged the BJP winning three seats in Kerala as a serious development, signalling that the Left's traditional dominance over the political landscape can no longer be taken for granted.
Notably, the reverses extended to the Left's own strongholds, where even loyal voters reportedly shifted allegiance. 'Even those who stood firmly with the Left have moved away. Though the problems were noticed, efforts were not made to resolve them,' Shailaja wrote, calling for introspection into the behaviour, language and lifestyle of party leaders and workers.
Organisational Weaknesses Flagged
Shailaja pointed to a visible decline in party branches and local committees, stressing that disciplined grassroots activity must be urgently rebuilt. She called for a comprehensive review spanning the last three election defeats and said corrective steps must follow without delay.
She also identified a generational disconnect as a structural problem. A child who was eight years old in 2016 became a voter in 2026, she noted, and many young voters may not understand Kerala's political journey or the role Left governments played in social development. The party, she argued, had failed to communicate its achievements to this new generation in a language they understood.
Media and Youth Outreach Failures
The former minister said the Left had not sufficiently adapted to the changing media landscape or to social media platforms where younger voters are most active. This failure to meet the youth on their own terms, she argued, contributed to vote erosion that went unaddressed for too long.
Shailaja defended the Left's substantive record — decades of land reforms, public education expansion, and healthcare initiatives that transformed Kerala's social indices — but acknowledged the party had not been able to effectively convey these achievements to a new electorate.
The Path Back
Shailaja expressed confidence that a comeback remained achievable, provided the party corrected its mistakes, countered misinformation, and rebuilt its connection with voters — including those who had drifted away due to local grievances or misunderstandings. 'Such people should be brought back,' she wrote.
She also warned against the growing influence of communal politics in the state, arguing that the Left's continued presence was essential to protecting Kerala's secular character.
This comes amid a broader reckoning within the CPI-M following successive electoral setbacks. Shailaja herself experienced back-to-back defeats — first from the Vadakara Lok Sabha seat in 2024, and then in the Assembly election when she contested from Peravoor after being moved from her traditional Mattannur seat, losing to sitting Congress legislator Sunny Joseph. Her willingness to speak candidly despite her own political vulnerabilities lends weight to the critique. Whether the party's leadership acts on it remains to be seen.