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regular-article-logo Friday, 22 November 2024

Vindictive politics: Opposition parties on Rahul Gandhi's disqualification as MP

While the Congress has said it will fight the matter politically and legally, the BJP has said the decision to disqualify Gandhi was a legal one and not a political call

PTI New Delhi Published 24.03.23, 04:19 PM
Rahul Gandhi.

Rahul Gandhi. File Picture

Several opposition leaders hit out at the BJP following the disqualification of Rahul Gandhi as an MP on Friday, alleging the ruling party was involved in vindictive politics, and said it was a new low for democracy.

West Bengal Chief Minister and TMC chief Mamata Banerjee said opposition leaders have become the "prime target of BJP".

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"In PM Modi's New India, opposition leaders have become the prime target of BJP! While BJP leaders with criminal antecedents are inducted into the cabinet, opposition leaders are disqualified for their speeches. Today, we have witnessed a new low for our constitutional democracy,” she said in a tweet.

Shiv Sena (UBT) leader Priyanka Chaturvedi questioned the state of democracy in the country.

"Vindictive and shameful action against Rahul Gandhi. This disqualification yet again proves that we are living in the times of caged democracy,” she said in a tweet.

CPIML general secretary Dipankar Bhattacharya highlighted the speed with which action was taken against Gandhi.

"The sentence against @RahulGandhi in the alleged Modi defamation case was announced yesterday and within a day he is now disqualified from the Lok Sabha! Nothing short of a surgical strike on democracy! Time for the entire opposition to rally against this unbridled emergency!” he said.

CPI leader Binoy Viswam asked where India was going as a democracy.

"Where is our democracy heading to? For a speech made in Kolar, case in Surat, that too after how many years? Anybody of their dislike can be booked for whatever reason they decide! Today it is Rahul Gandhi, tomorrow it can be you or me. Time to unite in defence of democracy,” he said.

BSP MP Danish MP termed Gandhi's disqualification unfortunate, and said if MPs were to lose their membership on such matters of defamation, then 70 per cent of parliamentarians will lose their membership, most of them being from the BJP, he claimed.

He alleged that many BJP leaders have linked Muslims to terrorism, while criticising the disqualification.

“If such an issue becomes a yardstick to disqualify an MP, then filing defamation cases will become a means to strip lawmakers of their membership,” he said.

The Lok Sabha Secretariat disqualified Rahul Gandhi as MP from Wayanad in Kerala after a day after a Surat court convicted him in a 2019 criminal defamation case for his remark, " “How come all thieves have Modi as the common surname?” Following his disqualification, Gandhi would not be able to contest elections for eight years unless a higher court stays his conviction and sentence.

While the Congress has said it will fight the matter politically and legally, the BJP has said the decision to disqualify Gandhi was a legal one and not a political call.

Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by The Telegraph Online staff and has been published from a syndicated feed.

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