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Internal Conflict and Split within Trinamool Congress

Tuesday, June 9, 2026
5 min read
Internal Conflict and Split within Trinamool Congress

The trouble inside the Trinamool Congress just got worse on Tuesday. Actor-turned-politician Satabdi Roy stepped out and publicly slammed the party leadership, laying out why she decided to break away.

It wasn't just her. Senior figures like Sukhendu Sekhar Roy and Kakoli Ghosh Dastidar had already voiced their frustration. Now another prominent leader, Roy who’s been associated with Banerjee since way back in 2009 is throwing shade about how things have shifted lately within the party structure.

She said the chief herself had changed a lot over these past few years. She told NDTV that she felt an emotional connection, sure, but what mattered was the actual work. That’s why she made the move. “Didi badal gayi thi,” she put it. “She changed a lot in the past few years. I have an emotional connection with her, but what matters to me is the work, and hence I have taken this decision.”

Roy ended up becoming the deputy leader for a group of MPs about a dozen of them who recently started meeting BJP folks and offering support to the NDA. It was a clear signal they were planning to split from the party. Kakoli Ghosh Dastidar, who is now running things as chief whip for this rebel group, claimed that the number of dissenting MPs had ballooned up to twenty.

This whole mess isn't new. There’s been this simmering unrest lately, fueled by public criticisms from various leaders questioning how the organization and its leadership were actually functioning.

When pressed about why people stayed quiet for so long while the party was in charge? Roy pushed back. She suggested things are finally becoming clear now. “We saw what happened when the Trinamool was in power. I understand the situation now, but I have to do it for the people of my constituency,” she argued.

She brought up a bigger reason for the revolt: the feeling that many leaders just couldn't get access to the top brass. Only a select few seemed to make decisions while everyone else was sidelined. “I am leaving the party because our voices were unheard,” she said plainly. “No one heard us. Only selective people had access to Mamata Banerjee.”

The sources within this rebel camp echoed that feeling. They claimed even ministers in state government often just ignored requests from MPs, never giving them time or consultation before major decisions dropped. And when they tried raising concerns over the last few years? They were told to stay silent.

Roy also addressed those who asked why these leaders waited until now to speak out at all. She seemed to imply that the accumulation of issues finally made silence impossible. “It is because things are becoming clear now,” she insisted. “We saw what happened when the Trinamool was in power.”

Then there were the allegations floating around about corruption. Roy brought it up again, pointing fingers at the system itself. “There is a lot of corruption in the Trinamool,” she stated bluntly. “I was very disappointed to see the kind of corruption that was happening from a lower level all the way up to the higher levels.”

She added that she didn't need any political protection just to keep her reputation clean. “My image is already clean,” she asserted. Her comments just pile on the criticism facing the TMC leadership, showing how this internal dissatisfaction is spilling out into the public eye.

Written by Gree News Team — Senior Editorial Board

Gree News Team covers international news and global affairs at Gree News. Our collective of senior editors is dedicated to providing independent, accurate, and responsible journalism for a global audience.

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