India

Maha events shameful for Indian democracy: Cong

The Congress on Thursday accused the BJP Government of capturing power “unethically” by the use of money and muscle power, and condemned it for destablising democratically-elected Governments. In a statement, Congress general secretary Jairam Ramesh said after coming to power at the Centre in 2014, the focus of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has been to capture power in the States and bring down the elected Governments rather than serve the people. “We strongly condemn the way BJP is destabilising both democratically-elected governments and democratically-installed Governments. This is not only an insult to democracy, but also an insult to the people who voted against the ideology of the BJP,” he said in a statement.

“Through the naked display of money and muscle power, the BJP has undemocratically and unethically captured yet another State Government. Under the Modi-Shah duo, the BJP wants to capture power at any cost, either directly or through remote control. What happened in Maharashtra is shameful for Indian democracy,” he said.

The party’s statement comes on a day rebel Shiv Sena leader Eknath Shinde was sworn in as the chief minister of Maharashtra. In a move that stunned political pundits and potentially checkmated the Shiv Sena, BJP leader Devendra Fadnavis on Thursday announced that Shinde will be the next chief minister of Maharashtra.

Ramesh further alleged that offices of the Governors and Speakers, and agencies like the Enforcement Directorate (ED) and the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) are openly misused, adding that buying MLAs has become so commonplace that the Finance Minister blurted out the truth today, when she suggested imposition of GST on horse-trading. “The BJP can go to any extent to win elections – From misuse of money power to polarisation and violence. Despite using all these tactics, if the voters reject them, then they start hatching conspiracies to topple elected governments,” he said. The Congress leader said in 2016, the BJP brought down the Congress Government in Uttarakhand in a similar way, where due to Congress MLAs leaving the party, the Government elected for five years was reduced to a minority in four years.

In Arunachal the same year, 43 out of 44 Congress MLAs defected to the BJP-backed People’s Party of Arunachal Pradesh under the leadership of Chief Minister Pema Khandu. In the 2017 Assembly elections in Manipur, the Congress party emerged as the single largest party by winning 28 out of 60 seats, he said, adding that the BJP had only 21 seats, but the Congress was not given a chance to prove its majority. A similar game happened in Bihar in 2017 when the BJP toppled the Grand Alliance Government that lasted 20 months.

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