Samajwadi Party stalwart Ramgopal Yadav turned the tables on BJP’s Nishikant Dubey amid demands to disqualify Rahul Gandhi from Parliament. In a pointed response from the national capital, Yadav declared that Dubey’s own Lok Sabha seat should be the first to go if such motions are tabled.
‘No one matches Dubey’s level of vitriol,’ the senior SP leader quipped, framing the controversy as a blatant case of the pot calling the kettle black. This verbal showdown underscores deepening political divides in India’s polarized landscape.
Delving into policy critiques, Yadav tackled Gandhi’s legal surrender and its implications for farmers. He cautioned against unrestricted foreign grain imports under zero tariffs, arguing it would devastate local farmers’ livelihoods. Imports extend to animal feed, he added, threatening the agrarian economy.
Yadav painted a vivid scenario of imported realities clashing with Indian traditions: ‘US livestock gets meat-based feed. Cows consuming that would produce tainted milk, unfit for puja or havan.’ He positioned this as an assault on Hindu sanctity, with self-proclaimed piety masking unholy agendas.
The SP MP promised robust resistance from his party and anticipated mass farmer uprisings. Shifting to electoral foul play, he lambasted the BJP for allegedly using Form-7 to purge voter rolls, with insiders tipping off which booths face deletions—a tactic Akhilesh Yadav has repeatedly flagged.
As political tempers flare, Yadav’s broadside signals opposition unity against perceived BJP overreach in both policy and polls.