MP Polls : Digvijaya Singh Sidelined In Madhya Pradesh To Hide Failure: PM Modi

Election in Madhya Pradesh: Digvijaya Singh, who was Madhya Pradesh chief minister from 1993-98, has said that “his party loses votes if he campaigns.”

 

 

In an apparent reference to Congress leader Digvijaya Singh, Prime Minister Narendra Modi said that one of the senior Congress leaders is not being allowed to campaign for the upcoming assembly elections in the state as the party fears that people will recall the failure of their tenure if Mr Singh campaigns.

Digvijaya Singh, who was Madhya Pradesh chief minister from 1993-98, has said that “his party loses votes if he campaigns.”

Addressing a rally here on Sunday, the Prime Minister said, “One of the senior Congress leaders is not being allowed to campaign during these elections. The reason is that the Congress fears that if he campaigns, the party will lose as people will recall what the fate of Madhya Pradesh was during the time they were in power.”

The Prime Minister also accused the Congress of playing divisive politics and said, “Congress neither has any policy, intention, nor a leader… its leader is confused. Let the naamdar (apparently Congress chief Rahul Gandhi) write down on a piece of paper how many zeroes are there in Rs. 23,000 crore. He will get confused.”

He further asserted that these elections are not about who would win or who won’t win but about rejecting the “negative forces who have always focused on the ‘divide and rule’ approach.”

Talking about the development work in Indore city, the Prime Minister announced that as part of the Smart City project, Rs. 23,000 crore will be spent on development of seven cities in poll-bound Madhya Pradesh including Indore over five years. He added, “In last two years, the foreign tourists’ influx has increased.”

Madhya Pradesh will go to polls on November 28 to elect 230 members of the legislative assembly. The results will be declared on December 11.

 

 

 

Note: RSS Feeds taken from Respective Websites.

Dissent in BJP ranks in Madhya Pradesh over denial of tickets for assembly elections

Deeraj Pateriya (49), who is the Bharatiya Janata Yuva Morcha’s state president and is contesting as an independent from Jabalpur North, said, “There is an attempt to finish me politically. And I want to show my popularity by contesting”.

 

The ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) in Madhya Pradesh is battling dissent in its ranks on a scale that appears much bigger than its rival, the Congress. Among its prominent rebels is former minister and four time BJP member of Parliament, Ramkrishna Kusmaria, (75), who is contesting as an independent from two seats- Pathria and Damoh — in the drought-prone Bundelkhand region.

“I gave 40 years of my life to the party and in return they did not had courtesy to tell me that a ticket will be denied to me,” he said. claiming to be hurt.

Deeraj Pateriya (49), who is the Bharatiya Janata Yuva Morcha’s state president and is contesting as an independent from Jabalpur North, said, “There is an attempt to finish me politically. And I want to show my popularity by contesting”.

Kusmaria and Pateriya have joined other senior leaders, such as former state minister Sartaj Singh, who is contesting on a Congress ticket from Hoshangabad, to have publically expressed their anger at the party’s ticket distribution.

“Over 67 important party leaders who are contesting from other political parties or as independents have been expelled so far,” said a senior BJP leader at the party headquarters in Bhopal. The leaders expelled include sitting MLA from Bhind Narendra Singh Kushwah and former mayor of Gwalior Sameeksha Gupta. There are 230 assembly seats in Madhya Pradesh, which goes to the polls on November 28.

The BJP leader quoted above said the party has a list of at least 100 leaders working against the party but no action is being taken due to electoral compulsions. “Any action now will send wrong message to our cadre and will provide the Congress an issue to hit at us,” the leader said.

The leader accepted that it was for the first time in the state that so many BJP workers had been expelled. The number was about 20 in the run-up to 2013 assembly elections, he said. “This is the biggest rebellion in the BJP I have ever witnessed,” said Kusum Mehadele, a minister in the Shivraj Singh Chouhan cabinet who was also denied ticket.

 

The BJP has dropped four ministers and at least 45 sitting MLAs .But officially, the party rejected reports of large-scale rebellion. State BJP spokesperson Rajneesh Agrawal said, “I don’t think there is any alarming situation for the party. Every political party faces such a situation at the election time and it would not have any impact on the party’s prospects.”

In the Congress, the scale of the rebellion appears to be smaller. “We have expelled less then 20 leaders and workers,” a state Congress leader said on condition of anonymity.He said there were not many rebel candidates unlike Rajasthan where the party had faced violent protest by workers for denial of tickets.

The only big leader to face action was former Rajya Sabha member Satyavrat Chaturvedi, whose son Nitin Chaturvedi is contesting on a Samajwadi party ticket. He was expelled.

“The BJP is battling rebellion because the party has not only betrayed the people but also a section of its workers and leaders”, said state Congress spokesperson Bhupendra Gupta.

Political observer Bhagwandev Israni confirmed the scale of the rebellion was larger in the BJP. “This is a reflection of the political scenario. The BJP is facing a bigger problem than the Congress, unlike the previous three elections, as BJP leaders and workers realise which direction the wind is blowing.”

 

 

 

Note: RSS Feeds taken from Respective Websites.

To take on Congress heavyweight Sachin Pilot, BJP fields its lone Muslim candidate in Rajasthan

Yoonus Khan is the only Muslim candidate BJP has fielded for the upcoming assembly elections in Rajasthan.

 

HIGHLIGHTS

  • BJP has changed its choice of candidate against Sachin Pilot at the last minute
  • Instead of sitting MLA Ajit Singh, BJP has opted for its only Muslim face, Yoonus Khan
  • Rajasthan is going to polls on December 7, results to be declared on December 11

After the Congress decided to field Rajput leader Manvendra Singh against sitting Chief Minister Vasundhara Raje, the BJP, has now fielded the party’s Muslim face Yoonus Khan against Congress heavyweight Sachin Pilot from Tonk.

In what clearly has been a last minute change of strategy for the BJP, the party has decided to replace Ajit Singh Mehta, BJP’s sitting MLA from Tonk district, to give the ticket to Yoonus Khan.

Khan is considered a close confidante of Vasundhara Raje and the second in command in the Rajasthan government. He is also the sitting MLA from Deedwana, a constituency from where he wanted to re-contest the upcoming assembly elections.

Mehta was given the ticket in the first list itself, however, with the Congress deciding to field Sachin Pilot from Tonk, the BJP removed him to go for Yoonus Khan from Tonk, a constituency with a sizeable Muslim population.

Khan is the only Muslim candidate BJP has fielded for the upcoming assembly elections in Rajasthan. Apart from Mehta, the BJP has also dropped Shankarlal Kharadi’s name who was earlier given a ticket from Kherwara seat.

“The BJP may launch whosoever from here. But the people have decided that they want the Congress to win,” Sachin Pilot said in reaction to the alteration.

Both Pilot and Khan filed their respective nominations from Tonk assembly constituency on Monday.

Earlier, there was much speculation about Gehlot and Pilot contesting the assembly elections in Rajasthan.

It was being said that the senior leadership of the Congress was not in favour of either Sachin Pilot or Ashok Gehlot contesting the upcoming assembly elections. However, the matter was put to rest after it was declared that both will be contesting.

“On the orders of Rahul Gandhi and request of Ashok Gehlot, I have decided to contest the upcoming assembly elections,” Pilot said.

Pilot, while speaking to India Today TV, claimed that BJP deserves to be booted out, claiming that practical, implementable promises will be announced and the Congress will deliver them on the ground.

“I can’t predict numbers but I can tell you that with five years of work and our leaders’ contribution to make the party strong, we will get a historic mandate,” Pilot said in an interview with India Today TV.

Assembly elections in Rajasthan are due on December 7 while the results will be declared on December 11.

 

 

 

 

Note: RSS Feeds taken from Respective Websites.

Rajasthan elections: Congress announces 10 new names in 3rd List Of Candidates

On Saturday, the Congress released its second list of 32 candidates, pitting Manvendra Singh, son of BJP veteran and former Union Minister Jaswant Singh, against Chief Minister Vasundhara Raje in her traditional Jhalrapatan seat.

 

The Congress on Sunday released its third list of candidates for 13 constituencies, leaving five seats to its allies in the December 7 Rajasthan Assembly polls.

Among the 13, three candidates have been named as replacements.

B.D. Kalia has been fielded from Bikaner West, replacing Yashpal Gehlot who will now contest from Bikaner East. The party had earlier named Kanhaiyalal Jhawar in Bikaner East.

In Keshoraipatan, C.L. Premi has been replaced by Rakesh Boyat.

The Congress left the seats of Bali to the Nationalist Congress Party, Mundawar and Kushalgarh to the Loktantrik Janata Dal and Bharatpur and Malpura for Rashtriya Lok Dal.

On Saturday, the Congress released its second list of 32 candidates, pitting Manvendra Singh, son of BJP veteran and former Union Minister Jaswant Singh, against Chief Minister Vasundhara Raje in her traditional Jhalrapatan seat.

The Congress, in its first list of 152 candidates released on November 16, fielded both its Chief Ministerial aspirants – Ashok Gehlot and Sachin Pilot.

While the two-time Chief Minister Gehlot is contesting from his traditional Sardarpura seat, Mr Pilot is in the fray from Tonk.

The party has also fielded former Union Ministers C.P. Joshi and Girija Vyas for the Nathdwara and Udaipur Assembly seats respectively.

 

 

 

Note: RSS feeds Taken from respective websites

No Muslim among 162 BJP candidates in Rajasthan Polls : Is party back to Hindutva?

Of the 162 BJP candidates, announced so far in two instalments for the 200-member Rajasthan Assembly polling for which is due on December 7, one absence the observers have marked is of any Muslim candidate, strengthening the perception that the party is playing the Hindutva card.

Mahesh Sharma, Union Minister of State for Tourism and Culture, who comes from Alwar, strongly denies the Hindutva slant, yet there are others in the party who say the BJP knows it well that Muslims in Rajasthan don’t constitute a vote bank.

One of the sitting MLAs, Habibur Rehman from Nagaur, on Wednesday joined the Congress when he failed to find his name in the list released on Sunday.

Rahman said the BJP is playing the Hindutva card in Rajasthan.

Another state minister Yunus Khan too failed to find his name. But, unlike Rehman, Khan has expressed his loyalty to the party.

Soon after the BJP released its first list of candidates, general secretary of BJP’s Minority cell M Sadiq had written to Prime Minister Narendra Modi expressing his concern as to how party members would reach out to the community if Muslims don’t get the party nomination.

The BJP in 2013 had fielded four Muslim candidates. Two of them were elected: Habibur Rehman from Nagaur seat and Yunus Khan from Deedwana.

“The BJP is a democratic party unlike the Congress where a board decides a candidate. The candidates are selected keeping in mind a variety of factors, including candidates’ strengths,” said Mahesh Sharma.

Avinash Rai Khanna, BJP’s Rajasthan election in-charge, said party candidates are shortlisted after ‘raishumari’ in consultation with grassroots workers as well as top leaders. He said the final BJP list is yet to come and until then no conclusion should be drawn on the composition of candidates based on caste and religion.

Rajasthan Congress vice-president Archana Sharma said, “The BJP could not perform in the state. Now they are trying to polarise the situation. But this won’t work… Rajasthan is no Uttar Pradesh.”

Salawat Khan, General Secretary, BJP Minority Morcha, said in the last elections, the party gave four tickets to Muslims. “So far we have not been given any party nomination. We are still hopeful that the party would consider candidates from the community,” he said.

In 2013 polls, the BJP had swept 163 of 200 assembly seats in Rajasthan.

 

 

Disclaimer: RSS has been taken from their official website.

Former Rajasthan DGP Harish Chandra Meena quits BJP, joins Congress

  • Harish Chandra Meena, during the 2014 Lok Sabha elections, had defeated Kirori Lal Meena
  • Congress announced both Pilot and Gehlot will be contesting upcoming Rajasthan Assembly elections
  • Assembly elections in Rajasthan are due on December 7

Harish Chandra Meena, the former DGP of Rajasthan who fought and won from Dausa Parliamentary constituency on a Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) ticket in 2014, joined the Congress today. Meena was welcomed in the party by former Rajasthan chief minister and Congress general secretary Ashok Gehlot. Rajasthan Pradesh Congress Committee (PCC) chief Sachin Pilot and Congress’s state in-charge for Rajasthan Avinash Pande were also present.

“I have joined the Congress today without any pre-condition,” Meena mentioned.

Harish Chandra Meena, during the 2014 Lok Sabha elections, had defeated Kirori Lal Meena, who had contested on the ticket of National People’s Party (NPP), by a margin of more than 45,000 votes. Kirori Lal Meena later joined the BJP and is now a Rajya Sabha MP from the BJP. Also in the fray during the 2014 Lok Sabha elections was Harish Chandra – Meena’s brother, and Congress leader Namonarain Meena, stood third in the contest.

The Congress also announced that both Pilot and Gehlot will be contesting the upcoming Rajasthan Assembly elections.

Within the political circles it was being speculated that the senior leadership of the Congress was not in favour of either Sachin Pilot or Ashok Gehlot contesting the upcoming Assembly elections. However, the matter was put to rest after it was declared that both will be contesting the upcoming elections.

“Both Sachin and I will contest the upcoming Assembly elections,” Ashok Gehlot mentioned.

Sachin Pilot can contest the upcoming Assembly elections from Ajmer whereas Gehlot can be the Congress candidate from Sardarpura.

CONGRESS WILL GET A HISTORIC MANDATE: SACHIN PILOT

Earlier, sounding upbeat about his party’s chances, Sachin Pilot had mentioned to India Today that the Congress will get a historic mandate in the upcoming Rajasthan Assembly elections.

Pilot, while speaking with India Today, claimed that the BJP deserves to be booted out claiming that practical, implementable promises will be announced and the the Congress will deliver them on the ground.

“Mr Gandhi has started a campaign in Rajasthan two months ago and we are taking it forward.”

– Sachin Pilot

“I can’t predict numbers but I can tell you that five years of our work and our travel with all our leaders contributing to make the party strong, we will get a historic mandate. We have shown this in the by-elections when the entire might of the BJP and the government was deployed at the by-elections and we defeated them convincingly in all the by-elections. So, so far, there have been 22 seats where by-election polls have taken place and the Congress party has won 20 of those 22. It tells you something about which way the wind is blowing. We are going with a positive agenda. Mr Gandhi has started a campaign in Rajasthan two months ago and we are taking it forward. We are going to the taluka, to the block, tehsil, and panchayat level. Our booth workers are very active and I think the contest is going to be between the performance of Vasundhara ji’s government, to what she had promised and to what the Congress can actually deliver. No jumlas, no false promises,” Pilot said in an interview

Assembly elections in Rajasthan are due on December 7. Both the BJP and the Congress have, at least on the face of it, been exuding confidence.

Disclaimer: RSS has been taken from their official website.

Chhattisgarh elections: BJP relies on Raman Singh, Congress on anti-incumbency and Ajit Jogi on the third front

Chhattisgarh polls are again about its Chief Minister Raman Singh who for 15 years has dominated the state’s scene. It is also about Singh’s ‘frenemy’ leader Ajit Jogi and his never-ending battles with the Congress.

This time Jogi has formed a ‘third front’ by joining hands with Mayawati’s Bahujan Samaj Party, which could be a big stumbling block for the Congress’ bid to unseat Singh’s government. Jogi asserts he is fighting to end the BJP’s rule but his detractors think that he is again bailing out Singh.

Nevertheless, a rejuvenated Congress under Rahul Gandhi hopes to cash in on what it sees as a strong anti-incumbency mood among the electorate. It thinks Jogi and his Janta Congress Chhattisgarh (JCC) are on the decline because their role is seen as spoilers preventing change.

A third factor that remains in the background, particularly in certain hill areas, is the role of Maoists whose waning influence is punctuated by intermittent deadly attacks. The Maoists are not just against the elections. They have put up posters, directly threatening people against voting for the BJP.

Chhattisgarh has an assembly of 91 seats. It goes to poll on November 12 when the first phase of voting will take place for 18 seats, 12 of which are located in the Naxalite-hit Bastar region and Rajnandgaon. The second phase, which will cover the remaining seats, will take place on November 20.

Singh admits that it is not easy for him and the BJP. However, he feels that the people will still vote for his leadership and party because they have seen changes under his tenure. He sees disarray in the Congress camp though he won’t treat Jogi’s threat to play the kingmaker lightly.

Jogi is not contesting the elections himself, preferring to campaign for his third front. Earlier, he had announced that he would contest against Singh in the latter’s home constituency of Rajnandgaon. Later he backed out.

In the 2013 polls, the vote share between the BJP and the Congress was less than 1 percent. While the BJP got 41.04 percent of the total votes, the Congress polled 40.29 percent, but could only secure 39 assembly seats. The BJP got 49 seats and one each was won by the BSP and an independent.

The narrow margin of victory five years ago has made the Congress more hopeful of breaking the BJP’s winning streak this time.

Jogi thinks that his alliance partner, the BSP, can eat into the votes of the BJP as well as the Congress in some pockets to give his front a decent number of seats for a key role in the post-poll scenario if the December 11 results present a hung house.

Interestingly, Singh, unlike the Congress, is not treating the Jogi-Mayawati alliance as a non-starter. “The BSP has a 4-5 percent votes and Jogi has 2-3 percent votes. If they add up to 5 or 6 percent votes, there will be impact on around 30 constituencies,” he said in a recent interview to a media house.

The Congress is focusing sharply on the distress of farmers, claiming that days of Singh’s magic as ‘Chawal Baba’ (the miracle maker who ensured rice to poor under a successful Public Distribution System) are over. The Congress also harps on what it calls the lack of development under the BJP, denouncing the latter’s claim of vikas as all hype and no substance.

However, dismissing the talk of tremendous voter fatigue working against him, Singh has held that “the anti-incumbency that is talked about now was said in 2013 as well. But people think that change has taken place in 15 years — a new Chhattisgarh is being built…”

All the parties concede that Singh’s achievements cannot be dismissed as mere claims because the state has made considerable progress though some social indicators are still on the lower side.

Many leaders believe the key to retaining or capturing power in Raipur depends largely on who wins in the Bastar division, which also goes by the Maoists’ description as the Red Zone.

In the 2013 polls, the BJP won the elections but lost its hold in the region even as the Congress gained an upper hand. Of the 12 seats in the region, the Congress grabbed eight seats while the BJP mustered the remaining four seats. The saving grace for the BJP was that it won in other regions.

Since then, Singh’s government has undertaken a lot of development work in Bastar. In his pre-election interviews, the CM has asserted that “there are some patches where they (Maoists) have influence, but the people of Bastar are with the government on the path of peace and development. The development work in Bastar is because of people’s faith (in administration). We have laid roads in Dantewada, Sukma, Bijapur, (where earlier) people could not dream of it. Big interstate bridges have been built on Andhra Pradesh and Odisha border. This has changed the economy of the area. (There have been) medical colleges and irrigation… I believe the people are with us”.

That brings us to the next question: will Raman Singh remain merely a leader of Chhattisgarh?

When Prime Minister Narendra Modi came to power in 2014, Singh’s name was among those who were thought to have been sounded out for eventually shifting to the Centre. Perhaps, once the Chhattisgarh polls are over, Singh may move away from the state politics — as the BJP needs to harness new faces and younger lot of leaders for its future in the state. This shift might happen after the 2019 Lok Sabha polls.

 

 

 

Disclaimer: RSS has been taken from their official website.

BJP paradrops big guns ahead of Chhattisgarh face-off

Shah released the party’s manifesto in Raipur, lauding the three-term government of chief minister Raman Singh for the developmental work it had done for the state once referred to as ‘BIMARU’.

On the final day of campaign for the first phase of polling in Chhattisgarh, the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) para-dropped big guns to ensure that the opposition Congress party felt the heat. BJP chief Amit Shah and Hindutva mascot Yogi Adityanath, led the attack from the front.

Shah released the party’s manifesto in Raipur, lauding the three-term government of chief minister Raman Singh for the developmental work it had done for the state once referred to as ‘BIMARU’ (original acronym coined in the 1980s for the four states of Bihar, Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan and Uttar Pradesh that were economically backward).

“The Congress ruled the country for 55 years, but it is the BJP which is working hard to ensure that the fruits of development reach the last person in the society. The manifesto for the fourth term in office has been prepared by consulting all sections of the society. I assure you that all promises made will be honoured,” Shah said.

Raman Singh, who is seeking re-election for a fourth term, told reporters: “The Congress used farmers like vote banks. They did nothing for farmers in the past 60 years. This year, we will buy 80 lakh quintals of wheat from farmers.” Singh was congratulated by his party president for making the state of Chhattisgarh “almost Naxalism-free”.

“The BJP government under chief minister Raman Singh has contained naxalism and made the state almost free of it. A party that feels naxalism is a medium for revolution cannot do any good for Chhattisgarh,” Shah accused the Congress.

Shah’s statement was in reference to Uttar Pradesh Congress chief Raj Babbar’s comments in Raipur last Saturday, when he said, “Naxals had launched a ‘revolution’ which cannot be stopped through guns but resolved through talks.” Uttar Pradesh chief minister Yogi Adityanath was also unsparing in his attack against the Congress.

Addressing a rally in Chhattisgarh’s Lormi, Adityanath said: “The Congress encouraged naxalism for its gains, but when it became dangerous for the security of people, it was the BJP which had to deal with the issue sternly. The Congress has been encouraging Naxalism actively and covertly.”

Adityanath accused the grand old party of jeopardising the nation’s security. “The Congress, for its own gains, played with the security of the country, be Chhattisgarh or Jharkhand, where the issue was of giving asylum to naxalites, or using states like Kashmir for political benefits. But for the BJP, national security is of prime importance, hence we never accepted toying with it,” Yogi said.

The BJP’s Hindutva posterboy, who has been championing the cause of the Ram temple at the disputed site in Uttar Pradesh’s Ayodhya, raised the issue in battleground Chhattisgarh, too.

Adityanath said: “While it is a known fact that Lord Ram was born in Ayodhya, the matter is pending before the Supreme Court. Senior Congress leader Kapil Sibal had petitioned before the court that a decision should not have been taken over the issue before 2019.”

He further alleged, “The Congress should be asked if they are related to Lord Ram or with foreign invader Babur. Congress has no idea about the country’s respect and prestige. The Congress has always played with national security and is now coming to you for votes.”

The first phase of polling to 18 out of the 90 Assembly segments in Chhattisgarh takes place on November 12.

 

 

 

Disclaimer: RSS has been taken from their official website.

We Will Never Tie-up With BJP, Our Views are Very Different, Says TRS’ KTR

KCR’s son and IT minister KT Rama Rao talks to CNN-News18’s Marya Shakil about the grand alliance of opposition parties in Telangana, a tie-up with BJP and a larger role at the Centre.

 

The state of Telangana will go to polls in Decemeber this year, for the first time since its formation. The ruling TRS is the party in focus and its charismatic chief K Chandrashekar Rao is leaving no stone unturned to win this time. KCR’s son and IT minister KT Rama Rao talks to CNN-News18’s Marya Shakil about the grand alliance of opposition parties in Telangana, a tie-up with BJP and a larger role at the Centre

Interviwer : Joining me right now is TRS leader and IT minister KT Rama Rao. Thank you so much for your time here. So, this is the first Assembly election in Telangana ever since the state was carved out. Most of the surveys are showing it is the advantage to your father (KCR). The move of advancing elections has worked or is working on ground.

KTR: Well, if we look at what has happened in Telangana in last four years, every single election that has taken place in the state, the TRS has won extremely convincingly. Starting from the Greater Hyderabad Municipal Corporation polls, which is considered a mini-general elections of sort, we have won that very convincingly and this election in 2018 doesn’t appear different with TRS clearly ahead. Seven surveys have come out in last two months and each and every one has shown that the TRS will win with at least two- thirds majority. We are very confident.

There is grand alliance called ‘Mahakutami’ which is taking you on. It has Congress, TDP, CPI, Telangana Jan Samiti while you are going it alone, are you confident that your strategy of going alone will help you?

KTR: Let me point out that in 2014 we had won the election with majority . This time around it is no different. Even in the last election, the Congress had an alliance with CPI and other parties but this time even the Telugu Desam has joined its alliance. That is why we call it ‘Maha Ghatiya Bandhan’ there is no fundamental basis, no base on which this alliance can base itself. It is only power mongering and opportunistic alliance. I or people of Telangana don’t see any logic any convincing rationale for this alliance. We are very confident by (going for) this alliance, the Congress has shot itself in the foot and in fact this alliance bundled with contradictions will cost them dear.

We are also seeing that the alliance in Telangana is playing out at the national level. In fact, Chandrababu Naidu is today meeting MK Stalin. When we look at opposition unity and anti-Modi front, let’s not forget that in March your father had made that call for all non-Congress, non-BJP parties to come together. At that time, Naidu had shown inclination towards that, Mamata Banerjee had also approved , what exactly is the status of that third front or federal front?

KTR: The stand is very clear, the so called national parties both the BJP and the Congress have failed our nation. Even after 71 years of Independence there are still many issues plaguing this nation, there are many issues that haven’t been resolved by any of these coalitions. What we want is more powers to the state, more federal approach not just lip sympathy just calling it cooperative federalism or competitive federalism. If really India has to progress and grow and emerge as a very strong nation, the state has to be empowered and that is exactly why the idea of federal front was rooted by our leader KCR. Now what Chandrababu Naidu and other parties are up to is none of our concern. We hope to win this election in December convincingly and then we will start focusing on national politics and we will start making our moves after December 11.

So are saying there will be another attempt at federal front post December?

KTR: Absolutely. In fact, our CM and our leader is extremely clear that both the national parties have failed this nation and this country needs more stronger regional forces which can come together and can assure the true federal spirit which will lead to a strong nation from such combination

Who will stand with you as far as an anti-Modi bloc is concerned that is formalising and taking shape. We are seeing Sharad Pawar, Chandrababu Naidu, Mamata Banerjee, Akhilesh Yadav, who really would be a part of the federal front?

KTR: Trust me, the world is not as simple as it seems and there isn’t only a bipolar kind of situation that it is only UPA or NDA. There will be a third front, there will be a coalition of likeminded parties which will emerge because we still have a long way to go for national elections. We are right now focusing on just state elections but after this you will see a lot of things happening in January and February

But it doesn’t look like that Chandrababu Naidu is concentrating on state elections that is due in a month’s time , why do you think he has gone in for such coalition in state and taking you on with help of the Congress.

KTR: Desperate times call for desperate measures and Chandrababu Naidu ‘s party faces extinction threat in Telangana so therefore he is merely trying to assert himself and retain a seat or two in Telangana by way of this alliance. His party will be decimated in Telangana. His party is set for an extinction so it’s a desperate time for Mr Naidu. It’s a desperate gamble to try and cook up a coalition which has no fundamental basis whatsoever.

There is speculation that your father had kept the central leadership of the BJP in the loop when he went for dissolution of the Assembly. So, is Mr KCR going to be part of the NDA before or after 2019?

KTR: Let me put it this way, speculate as you may, speculate as anybody wants to, the fact is clear that we are an independent party we are not part of the UPA or the NDA. We have no friendship or liking for any of the national parties which we have consistently maintained. So to accuse us or speculate that we are going to sail with the BJP is nothing but humbug and you will see our efforts. You will see our efforts to actually bring viable alternative to the NDA and the UPA after December11, and you will see it yourself.

Last question, can you assure the people of Telangana that you are not going to support the BJP before 2019 and these are only rumours and speculations?

KTR: Like I said, absolutely without a question because there is no way our ideology can compel us to come together. We have a very different view from the BJP on this country, on our state. So there is no way we can work together and I can tell you for sure that Telangana Rashtra Samiti which is going to sweep the upcoming Assembly elections, we will also win at least 15 parliamentary seats in Telangana in 2019. We will have a very important role to play in Delhi. Any political party in India which thinks like us and agree with us and have a common fundamental basis in the core belief that the true federalism means empowering states. So we believe very strongly that a few regional parties coming together can certainly dictate who will be in driver’s seat in Delhi after April 2019 and you will see TRS playing a very important role there but i can assure you that it is neither going to be the BJP nor the Congress which will be in driver’s seat in Delhi.

 

 

 

Disclaimer: RSS has been taken from their official website.

It’s ‘one family, one ticket’ as BJP fields kin of senior leaders in MP

Faced with anti-incumbency and pressure from its leaders, BJP has done a tight-rope walk between changing sitting MLAs in its candidates’ list and accommodating the kin of those who have the potential to defeat the official nominee in case their wishes are not fulfilled.

Two such names figured in the third list of candidates for Madhya Pradesh Assembly elections released on Thursday, a day before the last date of nominations. The ego tussles between its top leaders in the state has led to the delay in declaration of names. BJP national general secretary Kailash Vijayvargiya’s son Akash will be the BJP candidate from Indore-3 seat. His name was finalised after some bad blood within the party.

Vijayvargiya had issued a statement a day before the announcement that Akash will win from whichever seat he contests the election, thus throwing a virtual challenge to the party leadership. The candidature of Akash was held up as Lok Sabha speaker and Indore MP Sumitra Mahajan wanted her son Mandaar also to be fielded from one of the Indore seats but this was not acceptable to the party. Since she was away on an official visit to Argentina, senior party leaders met Mahajan when she returned on  November 5 to discuss the issue. She has, however, denied that she ever wanted a ticket for her son.

Former chief minister Babulal Gaur’s daughter-in-law Krishna will contest from Govindpura seat. Gaur had quit the Shivraj Singh Chouhan cabinet some years ago after he crossed the 75-year age cut-off.

Congress leader Prem Chandra Guddu, who has switched over to the BJP, is also said to be in talks for a ticket for his son Ajit.

In most cases where BJP has denied tickets to sitting MLAs, it has accommodated a kin of the outgoing legislator. Lakshminarayan Yadav’s son Sudhir Yadav has been fielded from Surkhi seat.
Similarly, sons of ministers Gauri Shankar Sejwal and Harsh Singh are in the fray in their place.

Union minister Narendra Singh Tomar reportedly wants his son Devendra to be fielded from one of the seats in Gwalior which he represents in the Lok Sabha.

Chief Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan has been asked by the central leadership to pander to the wishes of some of the leaders he is not on good terms as not doing so may cost the BJP these seats. Chouhan’s brother-in-law Sanjay Singh Mesani joined the Congress and has been given the ticket from Wara Seoni seat.
Mahajan has also taken a backseat as Vijayvargiya has managed to get the ticket to his followers in Indore. Similarly, some of the candidates in Tomar’s area are not from his camp though he has been entrusted with the task of ensuring BJP candidates in the region win their seats. Meanwhile, BJP leader Sartaj Singh joined Congress on Thursday as he was not fielded by his party. Congress has given him the ticket from Hoshangabad.

Disclaimer: RSS has been taken from their official website.