JD(U) spokesperson Rajiv Ranjan Prasad, addressing key political flashpoints from Patna, accused DMK of unleashing a barrage of polarizing statements. The latest from a DMK minister reeks of vote-bank machinations aimed at splintering Tamil Nadu’s social fabric.
This pattern of rhetoric, Prasad charged, reflects DMK’s mounting anxiety over an impending electoral defeat. As coalitions led by AIADMK, BJP, and PMK solidify, the writing is on the wall: no path back to power for DMK, with voters firmly aligned against them.
He lauded Lok Sabha Speaker Om Birla for recusing himself from presiding until the no-confidence proceedings conclude—a time-honored practice that safeguards impartiality. Politicizing this erodes parliamentary sanctity, Prasad warned.
Rahul Gandhi’s parliamentary outburst, based on an unreleased book’s fragments targeting the Centre, exemplifies juvenile disruption. The Speaker’s intervention was spot-on, preventing unverified claims from tainting debates.
Regarding Ajit Pawar’s crash, Prasad advocated patience for DGCA’s forensic inquiry, rejecting conjecture.
The Murshidabad mosque controversy? Pure theatrics, he scoffed—a collusion between TMC and Humayun Kabir to engineer communal strife. Bengal’s electorate, battle-hardened by such ploys, will decisively reject TMC.
Bihar’s assembly saw shameful opposition disruptions during budget discussions, Prasad noted, contrasting it with Nitish Kumar’s legacy: two decades of progressive governance, from economic upliftment to fortified security and plummeting crime.
On ‘Vande Mataram’ protocols from the Home Ministry, Prasad invoked its pivotal freedom-era legacy. Marking 150 years, all must rise in homage, channeling the spirit of national heroes.