Kolkata:Newly appointed West Bengal Governor C V Ananda Bose feels that the role of the governor is to act as the "rainbow bridge" between the state and the Centre for "resolution of all conflicts" between the Raj Bhavan and the TMC government through "right solutions".
Bose, who was appointed as the Bengal governor on Thursday, said the differences between the Raj Bhawan and the state government should not be seen as a conflict but as a "difference of opinion" as both are complementary institutions.
"I prefer a resolution of conflicts as for any problem there is a solution, and we should arrive at the right solution. We should be able to keep all actors in the game together. Therefore I would say what the Constitution expects - that the governor has to know the way, show the way and go the way," he told PTI in a telephonic interview.
Bose's predecessor and the current Vice President Jagdeep Dhankhar was at loggerheads with the Mamata Banerjee government on a variety of issues, including the law and order situation in the state, since he assumed office in July 2019. Asked for his comment on resolving the differences between the Raj Bhavan and the TMC government in West Bengal, Bose said the governor has to act as a "rainbow bridge between the state and the Centre".
Bose felt he will get the support of the state government and will aim for it in acting as the bridge. "Both (Raj Bhawan and the state government) are complementary institutions. The founding fathers of the Constitution certainly did not want to create a sinecure. Certainly, there was a purpose. The purpose of a governor has been clearly defined in the Constitution. The governor is to act as a rainbow bridge between the state and the Centre," he iterated.
"The governor's role is to ensure that the government functions within the framework of the Constitution and all facilities should be provided to a democratically elected government to bring succour to the people. I don't see any conflict as far as the concept is concerned," Bose, a retired IAS officer, said.