In a blistering critique, BJP parliamentarian Anurag Thakur accused the Congress party of floundering desperately for relevance after ruling India for six decades. Speaking exclusively, he targeted Leader of Opposition Rahul Gandhi, comparing the party’s plight to a fish without water.
Thakur recounted recent parliamentary disruptions: Congress leaders, led by Gandhi, derailed discussions on key national addresses and budgets with unfounded protests. ‘No logic, just noise,’ he remarked, using the idiom of plummeting from heights only to snag on a low branch.
He lambasted their lack of expertise—confusing economic portfolios, avoiding substantive debate, and resorting to table-thumping and speaker sieges. ‘This is the state of a once-dominant force,’ Thakur observed.
With 95 losses under Gandhi’s belt and a century of defeats approaching, Thakur suggested external puppeteering, evoking images of programmed responses from abroad.
Turning to achievements, Thakur lauded PM Modi’s tenure: strengthening the economy, curbing corruption, fortifying borders, and elevating India’s global stature. Congress’s antics, he argued, reveal a party adrift, craving power it no longer deserves. As India surges ahead, their struggles serve as a cautionary tale of political decline.