BJP was reportedly planning to stage a protest outside CM Revanth Reddy’s residence against Congress’ opposition to The Constitution (131st Amendment) Bill, 2026.
The stakes are high, but Vijay remains largely absent from street campaigning, while party volunteers campaign on the ground to convert his appeal into votes in the assembly poll.
After months of mixed signals, public divergence & praising opponents, Tharoor has realigned with Congress leadership—attacking Centre in Parliament & campaigning for UDF in Kerala.
While 298 votes were received in its favour, 230 votes went against the proposed amendments, thereby falling short of two-thirds majority needed to clear the House.
Alleging that the Bills are a ‘panic reaction’, Congress leader Rahul Gandhi said the government is trying to take power away from ‘his OBC brothers and sisters’.
A handful of large poor states can theoretically determine the fate of the entire country, leaving others 'feeling like bystanders in their own country,' the Congress MP says.
Speaking at a rally in Madurai, the BJP leader said South India’s Lok Sabha share would remain 21.9% after the Bill, adding no state would be ‘reduced or disadvantaged’.
Ruling party has already drawn up list of 30 assembly seats where there is an 'irrational' increase in the number of voters—over 40 percent—between 2009 and 2026.
The manifesto promises Rs 2,500 monthly assistance for women and 8 gm gold and silk saree for every bride from families with annual income below Rs 5 lakh.
By mixing Indian maximalism with Western minimalism, desi influencers are using the hippie Met Gala to bring about a quiet revolution in festival dressing.
The reopening of the Strait of Hormuz eases supply fears, but controlled shipping, slow output recovery, and high costs may delay oil flow normalisation for months.
This special edition of Cut The Clutter, straight from the Siliguri corridor, details the strategic importance of the narrow strip of land in West Bengal, and how it’s a vital link connecting the Northeast to the rest of India.
American objectives are unmet. They neither have muscle nor motivation to resume the war. As for Iran, the regime didn’t just survive, it’s now led by more radical individuals.
Mr. Roy Barman, instead of being a cheerleader for the VPP leader, please grill him on his xenophobic stance regarding non-tribal residents of Meghalaya. Kindly ask Mr. Ardent questions on his virulently anti migrant labour speeches.
Mr. Ardent and his party, the VPP, has been indulging in dog-whistle politics for long. Their xenophobia vis-a-vis non-tribals residing or working in the state of Meghalaya is there for all to see. What is absolutely shameful is that they are so open and blatant in their hatred and contempt of non-tribals.
They are acting hand in glove with other xenophobic “pressure groups” like the KSU, FKJGP, etc.
The Print chooses not to report on such issues. The selective silence as well as outrage over issues speaks quite clearly as to how de-hyphenated the journalism actually is.
Mr. Roy Barman would do well to act like a journalist and leave the cheerleading act to sycophants.
Mr. Roy Barman, instead of being a cheerleader for the VPP leader, please grill him on his xenophobic stance regarding non-tribal residents of Meghalaya. Kindly ask Mr. Ardent questions on his virulently anti migrant labour speeches.
Mr. Ardent and his party, the VPP, has been indulging in dog-whistle politics for long. Their xenophobia vis-a-vis non-tribals residing or working in the state of Meghalaya is there for all to see. What is absolutely shameful is that they are so open and blatant in their hatred and contempt of non-tribals.
They are acting hand in glove with other xenophobic “pressure groups” like the KSU, FKJGP, etc.
The Print chooses not to report on such issues. The selective silence as well as outrage over issues speaks quite clearly as to how de-hyphenated the journalism actually is.
Mr. Roy Barman would do well to act like a journalist and leave the cheerleading act to sycophants.