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HomeIndiaCongress won't get majority but will do very well, says Kamal Nath

Congress won’t get majority but will do very well, says Kamal Nath

Madhya Pradesh CM added that BJP won't have numbers and to think that they will ever be able to form a government is too far-fetched.

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Chhindwara: Predicting a hung Parliament, Madhya Pradesh Chief Minister Kamal Nath says the Congress will do very, very well but is unlikely to get a majority and there will have to be a post-poll alliance to form a new government in Delhi.

The Congress veteran added that the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) will not be able to occupy the power seat as it will not get the numbers and no other major political party will form an alliance with it either.

“Of course, we are going to do very, very well but I do not see us reaching a majority and there will have to be a post poll alliance and this post-poll alliance will throw up different types of combinations,” Nath told PTI at his residence here on Saturday night.

He was asked to project the average number of seats his party could win in the polls to the 17th Lok Sabha and whether the grand old party will enter into an alliance at the Centre to form a government.

“If there is an alliance, the alliance will take decisions. There are today two types — one is anti-BJP and one is pro-BJP. The pro-BJP numbers are very small and for anti-BJP you see the entire political spectrum is against it.

“So, whatever numbers are thrown up (is to be seen). BJP is trying to think that they will ever be able to form a government (but that) is too far fetched. Because they will neither have numbers, nor will other political parties go with them,” the Madhya Pradesh chief minister said after wrapping up a day of campaigning in Chhindwara and neighbouring districts.

Asked if Congress president Rahul Gandhi would occupy the PM’s chair once their party forms the government, Nath said confidently, “Of course, if we have the numbers, Rahul Gandhi is the obvious PM.”

NYAY Scheme

Discussing the party’s minimum income guarantee scheme NYAY’, the nine-time MP from Chhindwara said giving Rs 72,000 per year to poor people is “a revolutionary scheme which will lift five crore families out of poverty”.

“We will do it simply because there are resources available. The question is apportioning resources,” the 72-year-old leader added.

I-T searches

The recent Income-Tax Department raids at premises linked to his associates were politically motivated, he said.

Those raided included Nath’s former Officer on Special Duty Pravin Kakkad, former adviser Rajendra Miglani and executives linked to his brother-in-law’s firm Moser Bayer and his nephew Ratul Puri’s company, officials said.

Properties linked to Ashwin Sharma, allegedly associated to Kakkad, were also covered in the operation. The raids were launched on April 7 at 52 locations in Delhi and Madhya Pradesh.

What the PM said first about the searches…where has the money been found? I don’t know the person (Ashwani Sharma), he never met me and he himself told the media that I am from the BJP. In his statement he said he is from the BJP so why am I being associated with all this? I do not know, Nath said.


Also readModi’s BJP is confident of winning 2019 because of the echo chamber it has created


The Congress stalwart charged the central government with using agencies for political purposes.

Was anything found in Mr Kakkar’s place nothing was found at his place, nothing. They (I-T) have not made a claim also. Where they have found anything they have already recorded it, he said.

Nath dismissed as fake the tax department’s allegation that a “widespread and well organised racket involving unaccounted cash of Rs 281 crore” was detected during the raids.

“All these fake statements of theirs…they themselves make statements. They themselves give it to the press. So, if they are playing politics, well…there is no end to politics,” he said.

On PM Modi

Hitting out at Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Nath said it is a “travesty of truth” when he describes the country as safe under his leadership.

Maximum terror attacks…those like that on Parliament and the Kargil war took place when the BJP was in power. How much can you fool the people?” the former Union cabinet minister asked.

Nath alleged that the PM cheated people of the country by making empty promises.

“Mr Modi must answer, first give response to all the promises he made in 2014. What has happened to ‘acche din’, what has happened about Rs 15 lakh (in every persons bank account), what has happened to what he promised the framers?,” Nath asked.

The voter of Madhya Pradesh is simple, is poor, is willing to accept anything. Sometimes even willing to be disappointed but he is not willing to be thugged, he said.

According to the chief minister, the voter was feeling cheated that Modi was saying nothing of what he said in 2014 — like two crore jobs to the youth as well as slogans like Skill India, Make in India, Digital India, Stand Up India.

They are asking what happened to all that. Where all has it reached, Nath said.

In his view, the Congress will “get in excess of 22 of Madhya Pradesh’s 29 Lok Sabha seats. Last time, the party managed only three seats.

Committed to MP

Nath, who has spent most of his political career in Delhi, said he is committed to his responsibility in Madhya Pradesh to ensure its “historic development”.

I am committed to be in Madhya Pradesh for five years and I am not looking at the Centre at all, he said.


Also readFrom Nehru to Kamal Nath, Congress’ cow politics has always been a balancing act


 

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SourcePTI

2 COMMENTS

  1. Given the inevitability of a coalition, led by either of the two national parties, the question is whether the Congress has been successful in building physical and emotional bridges with the regional parties and their leaders, some of whom have legitimate ambitions for the top job. Compare its almost farcical forays towards AAP with the seam less interoperability the SP, BSP and RLD have achieved in Uttar Pradesh, with eleven times as many seats. 2. Government formation was a walk in the park in 2004. The Left, with sixty MPs, did not wish to join, offered outside support. CM YSR, who got a big chunk from AP, told the leadership, I will take care of my MPs, don’t spare too many portfolios, give firms from our state large infrastructure projects. This time, each potential ally will have a wish list. No automatic reservation of the Big Four portfolios for the Congress. The Congress will have to relearn coalition dharma.

  2. From the pits of 44, ANYTHING looks like “Very well”. But, the hard fact is: Congress will remain on the opposition benches for at least another 5 years.

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