No wonder, then, that two 'N' words—Nano and Nandigram—are dominating the campaign here, splashed big and bold on hoardings, and bandied about in slogans, puns and bad jokes. The nerve centre of this constituency is Gariahat, a major crossroad which all of South Calcutta passes through. Gariahat gets a slice of everything that happens in this city—whether it's a rally, a parade, Buddhadeb Bhattacharya roaring Inquilab Zindabad, or Rahul Gandhi driving through on his way to see the TMC boss lady while giggling young girls cluster by the wayside hoping for a glimpse of the crown prince.
The rallies begin to snake out around 4 pm, leaving horrendous traffic snarls in their wake. Stuck in a jam recently, I found myself drowning in colour—the red flags of the CPI(M) flaring fire in the afternoon sun, fluttering from tramline posts and accenting the red and white Vodafone and Airtel signs; and the white, saffron and green TMC flags crisscrossing each other on lampposts. A red, black and white cartoon catches my eye—Mamata, jharu in hand, pounding down on bricks labelled Nandigram and Singur.