On most Dalit questions political parties from the Right and Centre to the Left have displayed right-wing tendencies. The right such as RSS-BJP and Shiv Sena has always opposed claims made by Dalits. Centrists such as the Congress have rhetorically supported the Dalit question but failed to implement reservation policies, control caste based atrocities and address discrimination and violence against Muslims. The Left too has remained indifferent to the Dalit question and their record too is abysmal when it comes to implementing reservation and providing representation to marginalised groups. They have invisiblised the caste question by insisting, until recently, that “class” is the only relevant category of social analysis. Even now, the support for Dalit cause is more due to electoral compulsions. Stéphanie Tawa Lama-Rewal’s study on the social profile of West Bengal MLAs over the last 50 years demonstrates consistent overrepresentation of upper-castes. It shows that West Bengal is the only state in India where the percentage of upper castes MLAs has increased from 38 per cent in 1972 to 50 per cent in 1996. The 34 years of uninterrupted Left front ruled West Bengal also failed to get rid of manual scavenging which is a caste-ordained practice of handling human waste. The state has 140,471 dry latrines which second largest number in India. Dalit movement has to constantly fight against the right wing politics led by the RSS-BJP as well as the right wing tendencies that are displayed by the Centre and the Left. Given this reality, it makes even less sense to say Dalit movements and politics are experiencing a rightward shift. With respect to Dalit issues, the alleged differences between right, left and centre that matter so much to elite politics are quite meaningless.