Fear created by Modi 'history' now: Rahul Gandhi in US
Congress leader said the Lok Sabha elections were not fought on a level playing field and claimed that the ruling coalition led by the BJP had collapsed, breaking "right down the middle"
PTI
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LoP in Lok Sabha Rahul Gandhi during an interaction with students and faculty at Georgetown University, Washington DC, USA, on Tuesday. PHOTO: PTI
Washington, 10 Sept
Congress leader Rahul Gandhi has
said the results of the General Elections in India this summer destroyed the
"idea of Modi" and the "fear" created by the prime minister
vanished, becoming "history".
The Leader of the Opposition in Lok
Sabha is currently on a four-day visit to the United States. He addressed
the prestigious Georgetown University and another event in Herndon, a Virginia
suburb of Washington DC on Monday.
Addressing the event, Gandhi said
the Lok Sabha elections were not fought on a level playing field and claimed
that the ruling coalition led by the BJP had collapsed, breaking "right
down the middle".
Asserting that things have changed
after the Lok Sabha results were announced, Gandhi said, "The fear created
by Modiji vanished in a second. It took years to cultivate that fear, a lot of
planning and money was involved but it took only a second for it to
evaporate."
Prime Minister Narendra Modi formed
a government for the third consecutive time after the Lok Sabha elections this
year, however, the BJP did not get a majority on its own. "I can tell you
that the idea of Mr Modi-- 56-inch chest, direct connection with God -- that's
all gone, its history now," Gandhi said.
He also claimed the ruling
coalition had collapsed and was broken "right down the middle". “It's
not just the prime minister, it's deeper than that. What has happened in India
is that the coalition that brought Mr Modi to power has collapsed. It's broken
right down the middle," he said. "So you'll see in these elections
that they will struggle. Because the basic idea that Mr Modi is running a
government for the people of India is gone,” he added.
Alleging that the Lok Sabha
elections were not fought on the same footing, Gandhi said, "I don’t see
it as a free election. I see it as a heavily controlled election." "I
don't believe that in a fair election, the BJP would come anywhere near 246
seats. I would be surprised," he said, asserting that the party had a
"huge financial advantage".
"The Election Commission was
doing what they wanted. The entire campaign was structured so that Mr Modi
could carry out his agenda across the country, with different designs for
different states," Gandhi claimed.
"The Congress party fought the
elections with their bank accounts frozen and has basically destroyed the idea
of Modi. You can see it because when you see the prime minister now in
Parliament...he is psychologically trapped, and he basically cannot come to
terms, he cannot understand how this has happened," he said.
Responding to a question, Gandhi
said that halfway through the campaign, Prime Minister Modi didn't think he
would get anywhere near 300 or 400 seats. “I think early on he realised that
this thing's going wrong. We were getting inputs from regular sources...It was
pretty clear that they were in trouble,” he said.
“So, there was this internal thing
going on in the prime minister that I could see. And psychologically, how is
this now happening? Because he's a person, as you know, he was in Gujarat for
many years, never faced political adversity, then prime minister of India.
Suddenly, this idea started to crack,” Gandhi said.
“We knew. When he said that I speak
directly to God, we knew that we had actually blown him apart. And that the
psychology had gone. So people think that, well, this was the prime minister
sort of saying that, look, 'I'm special, I'm unique, and I talk to God'. But
that's not how we saw it. Internally, we saw it as a psychological collapse,
what happened here? How is this thing not working?” he said. "Now that
idea has been replaced," he said.
Gandhi, who arrived in the US on
Saturday, interacted with members of the Indian diaspora and youths in Dallas,
Texas. He also plans to meet lawmakers and senior officials of the US
government in Washington DC.
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