In the high-stakes arena of Indian politics, BJP parliamentarian Naresh Bansal has fired back at Rahul Gandhi, branding his actions as a desperate bid to sow disorder. Speaking exclusively, Bansal linked Gandhi’s vitriolic rhetoric to a string of political setbacks that have left the Congress leader floundering.
‘He’s lost on every front, resorting to gutter-level speech unbecoming of his position,’ Bansal charged. The trigger? Gandhi’s uproar over snippets from Gen. Manoj Mukund Naravane’s forthcoming memoir, published prematurely in a magazine. Bansal urged adherence to parliamentary protocols, slamming Gandhi’s obstinacy as a sign of mounting hopelessness.
Bansal extended his critique to opposition reactions on the India-US trade pact. ‘Frustrated and ineffective, they disrupted without hearing the full statement,’ he noted. Detailing the negotiations, he highlighted how India safeguarded its interests, causing deliberate delays to secure favorable terms.
Shifting focus to the Supreme Court’s deliberation on challenges to CAA by Punjab and Bengal, Bansal mocked Mamata Banerjee’s legal savvy. ‘Her vote bank from Bangladesh is crumbling under CAA scrutiny, fueling her panic,’ he alleged. He decried Bengal’s deteriorating security, rampant corruption, and violence against opposition voices as symptoms of a rattled regime.
As tensions simmer in the capital, Bansal’s broadside signals BJP’s strategy to portray the opposition as chaotic, setting the stage for intense legislative battles.