India

Rahul Gandhi steps it up against PM Modi, and Kejriwal responds to the Maliwal assault controversy

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Rahul Gandhi, the leader of the Congress, persisted in his verbal abuse directed at the central government headed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, charging him with being an industrialist. In anticipation of the penultimate sixth phase Lok Sabha polls, Gandhi has intensified his criticism of PM Modi.

In Haryana, Rahul Gandhi leads the Adani government, which is the Modi government.

Gandhi said, “The Modi government is ‘Adani government,’” during an election rally to support party candidate Rao Dan Singh, who is running for the Bhiwani-Mahendergarh seat.

He expressed confidence that the INDIA bloc will form the next government and stated that once in power on June 4, the alliance will end the Agnipath scheme.

“The PM office is playing with the futures of young people by introducing the Agnipath scheme without first consulting army officials.” Modi separated the martyrs into two categories. Even after sacrificing their lives on the border, those who were recruited through the Agnipath scheme are not regarded as heroes. While those who were hired earlier are receiving all benefits, they will not receive a pension or government job benefit. He declared, “We will not permit the division of young people defending the borders.

Kejriwal’s initial response to the Swati Maliwal scandal

In his first interview with news agency PTI, Delhi chief minister and Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) convenor Arvind Kejriwal discussed the Swati Maliwal assault controversy and expressed his desire for justice as well as a fair investigation into the incident, of which there are two versions.

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When Kejriwal’s assistant Bibhav Kumar paid Maliwal a visit on May 13, Maliwal claimed that Kumar had physically attacked the chief minister inside his home.

Mamata threatens to sue the BJP for ₹1,000 crore for defamation.

The Trinamool Congress (TMC) government in West Bengal, which took office in 2011, suffered a severe blow when the Calcutta High Court decided to eliminate all entries in the OBC category after 2010.

The ruling that invalidated the OBC status that was awarded to “77 classes” in West Bengal, according to Prime Minister Narendra Modi, was a “tight slap” to the INDIA bloc of the opposition on Wednesday.

Chief Minister Banerjee, in the meantime, declared that her government would appeal the decision to the Supreme Court and that she would not accept the verdict.

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