JD(U) leader won’t talk about his political plans but tells ThePrint about his mission to bring opposition parties together to promote inclusive and composite culture.
Anubhuti Vishnoi
Following the upheaval in Bihar, Akhilesh Yadav is reaching out to opposition leaders to hold on to the dream of a united opposition for 2019.
Kumar Anshuman
There’s a pattern in Hyderabad’s F&B scene: new ventures run very well for the first three to six months. The real test for these supper clubs begins now.
The Centre is considering an increase in the National Company Law Tribunal's bench capacity, while the Standing Committee of Finance suggests fast-track courts.
The helicopters produced by Lockheed Martin are known as ‘submarine hunters’. India ordered 24 of these aircraft in 2020 to replace the Sea King helicopters. 15 have been delivered till date.
The India-South Africa series-defining fact is the catastrophic decline of Indian red ball cricket where a visiting team can mock us with the 'grovel' word.
Turncoats like Nitish deserve it. They will be neither here nor there. They will be treated like cheap prost’s and thrown to dogs once they are of no use.
The story is not well-founded. It lack substantiation, and is based on speculation on the part of the writer. Just the one quote from Nitish Kumar does not substantiate the conclusion well. The story says JD(U) was not invited for a cabinet reshuffle ceremony. I would like to know if all other parties were invited, and I’d like to know how JD(U) reacted to it. Why JD(U) should be invited for the ceremony when it is not a part of the cabinet, I don’t understand.
The bane of our times is this “if true, then” kind of journalism. Too much of sensationalism. True, The Print is not alone in this, in fact, The Print is better than others. However, The Print is a new publication. Publishing half-baked stories like this is the surest way to kill it. I’d advise the journalist to resist the temptation to ‘shock and awe’ unless he has ‘shock and awe’ material.
Turncoats like Nitish deserve it. They will be neither here nor there. They will be treated like cheap prost’s and thrown to dogs once they are of no use.
The story is not well-founded. It lack substantiation, and is based on speculation on the part of the writer. Just the one quote from Nitish Kumar does not substantiate the conclusion well. The story says JD(U) was not invited for a cabinet reshuffle ceremony. I would like to know if all other parties were invited, and I’d like to know how JD(U) reacted to it. Why JD(U) should be invited for the ceremony when it is not a part of the cabinet, I don’t understand.
The bane of our times is this “if true, then” kind of journalism. Too much of sensationalism. True, The Print is not alone in this, in fact, The Print is better than others. However, The Print is a new publication. Publishing half-baked stories like this is the surest way to kill it. I’d advise the journalist to resist the temptation to ‘shock and awe’ unless he has ‘shock and awe’ material.
Nitishji is become ne ghar ka ne ghat ka
Nitishbabu is slowly walking into the sunset, a path he has chosen for himself.