The crowd is quite thin, just a few thousand people, but its connect with Didi is electric. Her speech has a lot of Hindi as Barrackpore, centre of the old jute belt, has traditionally had a sizable Hindi-speaking population. She mentions Mangal Pandey, the mutineer hero from this town, talks of Chhat Puja and inclusive culture of its people. Senior Trinamool leader and former railway minister Dinesh Trivedi is the candidate from here part of his speech is also in chaste Hindi. "I would reckon about 35% of the voter is Hindi speaking. These are old migrants who came from Bihar, Uttar Pradesh and other places for the jute trade. They have thrived here, and the biggest Chhat Puja outside Bihar would be in my constituency," says Trivedi when we meet him later in the evening at the Dalhousie Institute in Park Circus. What about the BJP's charge that the Trinamool has let loose its thugs to beat up rivals, that West Bengal is the only state where there has been poll violence? "I can tell you with my long innings in politics, goondas can thrive only if they have the backing of the police. Our leader has a zero-tolerance towards violence," he says.