In Patna’s political arena, BJP leader Nitin Nabin dropped bombshells on the Nehru-Gandhi dynasty, calling it a saga of self-serving compromises that eroded India’s strategic edges.
The spotlight fell on Nehru’s 1954 giveaway of Indian claims in Tibet to China—for nothing in return. ‘He viewed India’s masses as a responsibility, but handed over our rights recklessly,’ Nabin charged.
Rajiv Gandhi’s era saw defense procurement twisted for personal gain, he alleged, with public funds funneled into private pockets. Rahul Gandhi? A tool of external forces, backed by Congress’s shadowy CIA ties, according to Nabin.
Sonia’s decade-long shadow governance via the NAC made her the de facto power center, he said, coinciding with foreign donations to the Rajiv Gandhi Foundation from Beijing and Soros circles.
Nabin dissected Rahul’s globe-trotting: over 247 trips, secrecy from intelligence, and controversial hobnobs with global activists. This isn’t leadership, he argued—it’s a threat to India’s youth aspiring for progress.
The nation, awakened, rejects such dynastic deals, Nabin declared. Future leaders must place Bharat first, or face the people’s verdict.