logo
Telangana BJP President calls AICC ‘All India Cheating Congress', sparks debate

Telangana BJP President calls AICC ‘All India Cheating Congress', sparks debate

Hindustan Times17 hours ago
Telangana BJP president N Ramchander Rao on Saturday accused the Congress of misleading the country with its claim that the BJP-led government at the Centre wants to change the Constitution. He added that AICC has now become the 'All India Cheating Congress'. "Emergency was a black day in the democratic history of our country," said N Ramchander Rao.(PTI File)
"The words 'secular' and 'socialist' were not there in the Constitution. It was added after the 42nd Amendment. The Amendment was brought during the Emergency. Emergency was a black day in the democratic history of our country. So, the original Constitution did not have the words 'secular' and 'socialist, '" Rao told ANI.
"Who asked them to add these two words? However, after adding those words, the Janata Party came to power, Atal Bihari Vajpayee came to power, and now the BJP has come to power three times. Did we ever attempt to change these two words?" he added.
Rao stated that there were no attempts to amend the Constitution by the Centre.
"It is only the Congress party which is trying to mislead the country by saying that the BJP will change the Constitution...Congress is frustrated because it is losing elections...AICC has now become the 'All India Cheating Congress'. So, these people have no other issues except to blame the BJP and spread falsehood," he said.
Earlier, a political controversy erupted after RSS General Secretary Dattatreya Hosabale questioned the legitimacy of including the terms "socialist" and "secular" in the Preamble of the Indian Constitution.
The RSS leader had remarked that the "forceful" insertion of the words "socialism" and "secular" in the Preamble during the Emergency should be reconsidered today.
Reacting to the remarks, Congress chief Mallikarjun Kharge on Friday dared and challenged Hosabale and top leaders of the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) in the centre to remove the words "secular and socialist" from the Preamble.
"Days before, I heard that some RSS person said that we should remove Secular and Socialist words from the Constitution. I challenge them - be it him, their BJP, PM Modi, or Amit Shah - no one can remove those words. This is my challenge to them. Can you dare to remove it? This is all talk," Kharge said while addressing the gathering at the Telangana Pradesh Congress Committee (TPCC) meeting.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

42 pc BC quota issue takes centerstage ahead of Telangana local body polls
42 pc BC quota issue takes centerstage ahead of Telangana local body polls

Hans India

time37 minutes ago

  • Hans India

42 pc BC quota issue takes centerstage ahead of Telangana local body polls

Hyderabad: All key political players in Telangana are vying with each other to capitalise on the reservation for backward classes (BCs) in the run-up to local body elections in the state. With the High Court recently directing the state government to conduct panchayat polls within three months, the ruling Congress and opposition Bharat Rashtra Samithi (BRS) and Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) are going all out to take mileage from the BC reservation issue. Both Congress and BRS are trying to mount pressure on BJP's state leadership to secure approval from the Centre for two BC reservation bills passed by the state legislature, providing 42 per cent reservation for BCs in education, jobs and local bodies. The BJP, however, has launched a counter-attack saying the responsibility to implement BC reservations lies with the state government. Telangana Jagruthi president and BRS MLC K. Kavitha's call for 'Rail Roko' on July 17 to mount pressure on the BJP to secure Presidential assent for the BC bills and AICC president Mallikarjun Kharge's reported direction to the Congress government to go for local body elections only after implementing 42 per cent BC reservations as promised have heated up politics over the issue. Kavitha, daughter of BRS president and former chief minister K. Chandrasekhar Rao, tried to take political advantage by dashing off a letter to Kharge on his visit to Hyderabad on July 4. She urged the Congress chief to conduct local body polls only after implementing the poll promise of a 42 per cent quota. She questioned the silence of top Congress leaders, including Kharge and the Leader of Opposition in the Lok Sabha Rahul Gandhi, on the BC reservation. Kavitha also asked Chief Minister A. Revanth Reddy as to why he was not leading an all-party delegation to the Centre to press for finalisation of the BC reservation issue. Telangana Congress president Mahesh Kumar Goud questioned the credibility of Kavitha. "The tone and tenor of the letter is quite strange from a person who never spoke a word on BC quota when she was an MP and MLC when her father was the Chief Minister for nearly 10 years," said Goud. Kharge virtually launched the Congress campaign for local body polls on July 4 by addressing a meeting of the party's village, mandal and district-level presidents and other party functionaries. He vowed to continue the fight to make the Centre agree to 42 per cent BC reservation. Kavitha sent another letter to the newly appointed state president of the BJP, Ramchander Rao, to secure the Centre's nod for BC reservation bills. She pointed out that it has been a long time since the bills were sent for Presidential approval, but there has been no progress. "If BJP is truly committed to the cause of OBCs, must act now. It's the responsibility of Mr Ramchander Rao to get the bills cleared by the Centre," she said. Meanwhile, BJP state chief Rao challenged the Congress party to implement its promise of 42 per cent reservation for backward classes ahead of the local body polls if it truly believed in social justice. Citing legal issues involved, Rao suspects the sincerity of the State government in implementing the 42 per cent reservation. "The Congress government would have consulted legal experts before passing the bills if it were committed to the welfare and advancement of the BCs," he said. Telangana Assembly, on March 17, unanimously passed two bills to enhance reservations for BCs to 42 per cent in education, employment and elections to rural and urban local bodies. Telangana Backward Classes, Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes (reservation of seats in educational institutions and of appointments or posts in services under the State) Bill 2025 and The Telangana Backward Classes (Reservation of seats in Rural and Urban Local Bodies) Bill 2025 were adopted by the Assembly. The bills enhanced reservations for BCs from the existing 25 per cent in education and employment and 23 per cent in local bodies. This was the major promise made by Congress in the 'BC declaration' announced in the Assembly elections held in 2023. As enhancing BC reservations to 42 per cent will breach the 50 per cent Supreme Court ceiling for the overall quota for all sections, the bills passed by the state Assembly require the Centre's approval. Revanth Reddy on March 17 wrote a letter to Prime Minister Narendra Modi, seeking time to meet him along with leaders of all political parties on enhancing reservations to BCs. The Chief Minister sought an appointment to meet the Prime Minister along with leaders of Congress, BJP, AIMIM, and CPI. The Congress has been urging the state BJP leaders to persuade Prime Minister Modi to include in the 9th Schedule of the Constitution of India the bills passed by the Telangana Assembly. With "no response" from the Centre, the Congress party is planning to fix the BC reservation at 42 per cent based on the caste survey by exercising the powers under Article 243D (6) of the Constitution. The state government is consulting Constitutional experts and also sought the law department's opinion. Political observers say by enhancing the BC quota by exercising its Constitutional powers, Congress will go to the polls claiming credit for the hike in the BC reservation. The issue of BC reservation hit the spotlight after the Congress government conducted a caste survey, which revealed that BCs constitute 56.33 per cent (including 10 per cent BC Muslims). Backward groups among Muslims currently enjoy 4 per cent reservations in education and employment. They are categorised as BC (E). (Mohammed Shafeeq can be contacted at [email protected])

TPCC scrambles for truce as Warangal Congress rift deepens; crisis ahead of panchayat polls
TPCC scrambles for truce as Warangal Congress rift deepens; crisis ahead of panchayat polls

Time of India

time37 minutes ago

  • Time of India

TPCC scrambles for truce as Warangal Congress rift deepens; crisis ahead of panchayat polls

HYDERABAD: Factional feuds within the Warangal unit of the ruling Congress are threatening to snowball into a full-blown crisis, just ahead of the crucial panchayat elections scheduled for Aug. At the centre of the unrest is a bitter standoff between endowments minister Konda Surekha and her husband and senior leader Konda Murali on one side, and a group of party MLAs, MLCs, and senior district leaders on the other. The internal strife has reached the Telangana Congress' disciplinary action committee, which is now working to broker peace before the party's poll preparations are derailed in the politically sensitive district. While the committee has already heard both the sides-albeit in separate sittings-it is now likely to summon the warring factions for a face-to-face meeting in a final attempt to resolve the dispute amicably. Bid to defuse crisis If the committee fails to bring about a truce, it will escalate the matter to the TPCC leadership, which may then seek intervention from the AICC, given that a sitting minister and multiple elected representatives are involved. Congress MLAs Naini Rajender Reddy, KR Nagaraju, Revuri Prakash Reddy, and Gandra Satyanarayana Rao, along with MLC Basavaraju Saraiah, Warangal town Congress committee president Errabelli Swarna, and KUDA chairman Enagala Venkatram Reddy, submitted formal complaints to the party, alleging 'unilateralism and high-handed behaviour' by the Konda couple. They also accused the duo of sidelining party MLAs, MPs, and MLCs, and making decisions without consultation-damaging the image and internal cohesion of the party in the district. In a show of strength, Murali appeared before the disciplinary committee with a large group of supporters and presented his version of events to vice-chairman A Shyam Mohan. He was later served a show-cause notice and asked to submit a written explanation. Despite the committee's intervention, tensions have only escalated. Murali made a statement claiming he had spent 70 crore in the last elections, funding it by selling 16 acres from a total of 500 acres he owns. He added that his political journey had always been a battle against upper caste dominance and reaffirmed his commitment to the political empowerment of BCs. Speaking to TOI, Shyam Mohan said, "All of them are our own party leaders. Some differences have cropped up, and we want to strike a truce by eliminating misunderstandings. This matter involves MLAs, MLCs, and a senior minister, and we aim to resolve it after a thorough inquiry." Sources said that the TPCC leadership is equally keen to defuse the crisis before the panchayat poll notification is issued. With Congress eyeing strong grassroots consolidation, any visible internal discord could weaken its position on the ground-especially in districts like Warangal, where the stakes are high, party insiders said.

When Rajesh Khanna attacked Vinod Khanna for ‘not honouring his words' as Gurdaspur MP, called Navjot Singh Sidhu a ‘comedian'
When Rajesh Khanna attacked Vinod Khanna for ‘not honouring his words' as Gurdaspur MP, called Navjot Singh Sidhu a ‘comedian'

Indian Express

time41 minutes ago

  • Indian Express

When Rajesh Khanna attacked Vinod Khanna for ‘not honouring his words' as Gurdaspur MP, called Navjot Singh Sidhu a ‘comedian'

Rajesh Khanna may be best known as a symbol of romance on the big screen in the 1960s and 1970s, but he was also a successful politician for a brief period in the 1990s. He continued to campaign for the Indian National Congress from 1984 until his death in 2012. In a 2012 interview to PTI, months before he breathed his last, Rajesh, who campaigned for Congress in the 2012 Punjab election, took potshots at a couple of politicians in the state, including fellow actor Vinod Khanna and former cricketer and The Great Indian Laughter Challenge judge Navjot Singh Sidhu. 'Vinod Khanna had made bundle of promises with the voters in Gurdaspur including that he would set up a film academy but never honoured his words. The voters threw him out,' Rajesh Khanna had said then. Vinod Khanna was elected as an Member of Parliament under a Bhartiya Janata Party ticket in the Gurdaspur constituency in 1997, where he won the elections yet again in 1999 and 2004, respectively. Vinod, who also served as the Union Minister for Culture and Tourism and Minister of State in the Ministry of External Affairs in the interim, lost the elections in Gurdaspur in 2009. However, he was re-elected in the 2014 Lok Sabha elections. He died of cancer in 2017. Meanwhile, Rajesh Khanna served as an MP from the New Delhi constituency under an INC ticket from 1992-96, post which he quit active politics. 'I would never like to ditch my own people with hollow promises like other politicians. I am of the opinion that when you are not able to serve the masses then don't make fake promises to them since these are the sins,' Rajesh had said in the same interview. He was offered to contest the 2009 Lok Sabha elections by INC from the constituency of his hometown Amritsar, but he declined the same. Rajesh Khanna also attacked Navjot Singh Sidhu, who'd won the Lok Sabha Elections from Amritsar in 2004 and 2009 on a BJP ticket. Rajesh referred to Sidhu as a 'good comedian,' but claimed he can never be a good politician because 'politics is not comedy.' Sidhu, a former cricketer, had also started judging the Star Plus comedy show The Great Indian Laughter Challenge in 2005. Also Read: Rajesh Khanna believed Amitabh Bachchan 'played dirty politics' against him; Big B felt 'betrayed' when Namak Haraam's climax was changed Sidhu claimed in 2014 that after being denied by BJP the chance to contest the Lok Sabha elections from Amritsar, he'd never contest elections from any other constituency. In 2016, Sidhu briefly former a new political front — Aawaz-e-Punjab. He contested in the 2017 Punjab Assembly elections yet again, but under an INC ticket, which he won and became the Minister of Tourism and Local Bodies in the state. He resigned from the cabinet in 2019 and last contested the Punjab Assembly Elections in 2022, which he lost.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store