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So if can't bite, then bark. Usual Congressi culture.. In India they will bite at those who are not nice to them.. & they will bark at those who they can't bite! :lol:

They deserve
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in LS polls,
 
Frankly speaking, there is nothing in it to be perceived negatively. In fact this is an excellent news for the real poor dalit families. The folks who have used it thrice would already be now at par with general category and it would be unfair to still keep giving them Quota.

This is excellent man!! People open your eyes now. Bjp is not enemy of anyone, they want to help minority, they want to help poor's. Look at their policy they are very fair. What else would anyone want?? It hurts me every time I read negative news about India and I see India is getting a golden chance in this elextion to take a flight on the path of prosperity. We must grab this chance and help India prosper by voting for BJP!!

Impossible to implement. This is just a lollipop that the BJP is giving to get the anti-quota guys on board.
 
Congress's maiden UP primary marred by allegation of rigging
LUCKNOW: Congress party's maiden primary in Sant Kabir Nagar turned out to be a stormy affair on Wednesday with one candidate failing to show up and others calling the process "bogus". The party was to hold its first primary in Sant Kabir Nagar. Contesting candidates, however, accused rivals of corruption and the organisers of rigging voters' lists.

Earlier this year, Congress vice-president Rahul Gandhi had proposed the electoral college system for the selection of Lok Sabha candidates in 16 parliamentary constituencies across the country. In UP, two constituencies are Sant Kabir Nagar and Ambedkar Nagar. Even though there were no protests in Sant Kabir Nagar to begin with, the process turned openly hostile with candidates and supporters openly criticising the contest. Calling the entire process a charade, one candidate said, "Voters have been bought by the rival camps. People have been paid between Rs 3,000 and Rs 7,000 for getting votes."

Former MP Shailendra Yadav also alleged the voting population had shrunk from the original voters list of 3,000 to only around 600 people on Wednesday.

The officiating persons, however, maintained the allegations were baseless and that the voters' names were rejected in case their neutrality was in question. The party's attempt to create internal democracy appeared to have struck a cord with a few. At least two candidates, Pervez Khan and Rohit Pandey also praised the system saying that the party workers were feeling empowered through the electoral college approach.


Oh look! Pappu's pet project is turning out to be a joke! :lol:

 
Paswan’s move betters BJP chances in search of allies

New phase in coalition politics; Gujarat riots will no longer be cut-off point for regional parties
On the afternoon of December 27, 2003, Congress president Sonia Gandhi walked from her 10 Janpath residence to the neighbouring 12 Janpath, Dalit leader Ram Vilas Paswan’s house.

Their talk over tea and a photo-op that followed marked the informal launch of the United Progressive Alliance (UPA), the Congress-led coalition that has been in power since 2004.

Mr. Paswan severing ties with the Congress on Wednesday and his willingness to jump on the BJP bandwagon mark the beginning of a new phase in coalition politics — the 2002 Gujarat riots are no longer a cut-off point for regional parties.

Since 2002, political realignments have taken place in two phases. In the first, the BJP became “untouchable” for many regional parties, and the Congress became the preferred choice for most. Even when the Left parted ways in 2008, the Congress had no difficulty finding a new partner in the Trinamool Congress.

By the end of the 2009 elections, the Congress was spoilt for choice. The Uttar Pradesh and Bihar rivals, SP-BSP and RJD-LJP, respectively, were supporting the Congress in Delhi. Though the Congress lost allies such as the TRS midway, more parties wanted to be with the party.

In the second phase, the alliance wind began to turn against the Congress, but the BJP still remained anathema to regional parties. Three years into the second UPA government, Mamata Banerjee’s Trinamool Congress exited in September 2012 and within months, the DMK too parted ways.

But the Gujarat riots remained a roadblock for the BJP. In fact, the elevation of Narendra Modi as the prime ministerial candidate led to the break-up of the BJP’s alliance with the JD(U) in Bihar. The BJP was left with only two partners — the Shiv Sena and the Akali Dal — both not adding much to what the BJP needed desperately — credibility.

That is why Mr. Paswan’s somersault in his approach to the Gujarat Chief Minister is a huge gain for the BJP and Mr. Modi. Mr. Paswan has been positioning himself as a champion of Muslim rights since 2003, but in a turnaround, he has virtually endorsed the BJP position that the 2002 riots cannot remain the cut-off date forever.

Though Mr. Paswan himself avoided that question on Wednesday, his son Chirag said a day earlier that courts had given a clean chit to Mr. Modi and the issue was closed.

Mr. Paswan’s turnaround is as significant to the BJP as the one by veteran socialist George Fernandes in 1998. That year, after the collapse of the National Front government, Mr. Fernandes joined hands with the BJP with the question: “If the demolition of the Babri Masjid is the cut-off date, for how long will you hold on to that position?” Mr. Fernandes legitimised the BJP and gathered more alliance partners for it.”

Mr. Paswan’s announcement will have that effect too, with the TDP and the MDMK likely to follow suit in the next few days. “Mr. Paswan’s new position is very significant as he had left the NDA on the question of Gujarat and is now returning to it under the leadership of Mr. Modi,” a senior BJP functionary told The Hindu.

Besides giving the BJP an image makeover, its position in Bihar, which sends 40 MPs to the Lok Sabha, will be bolstered by Mr. Paswan’s alliance. Getting at least 20 of these 40 seats is essential for the BJP to cross the 200-mark. “We are looking at 25 seats now,” a BJP leader from Bihar said.
Paswan’s move betters BJP chances in search of allies - The Hindu

Just goes to show ideology takes a hike when it comes one's own political interest. There has been many barking over the years that BJP will find it difficult to bring in allies, should they nominate Modi as their PM candidate. It was nothing but frightened Congress & it's cronies hoping against hope that BJP will abstain from nominating Modi as their candidate for PMship as a result of this sustained & relentless anti-Modi campaign! & now their panicking ever since BJP called their bluff! Frustration is quite evident in the form of Mani Shankar Aiyar, Salman Kurshid... & many more!
 
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CAG के आरोपों पर भाजपा ने या इनके पीएम पद के उम्मीदवार ने आज तक जवाब नहीं दिएI यही CAG जब केंद्र सरकार के खिलाफ रिपोर्ट निकालती है तो भाजपा उच्चल उच्चल कर आवाज़ उठाती है! भ्रष्टाचार पर भाजपा की दोहरी नीतिI



" पैसा फेको और तमासा देखो "

हम तो बोल ही रहे थे ओपिनियन पोल में कोई सच्चाई नहीं है.......पर अंधे भक्त मानते ही नहीं थे
अरे अंधो आँखे खोलो और ओपिनियन पोल कि सच्चाई देखो....अब बता दो ओपिनियन पोल कितने दिए थे ??

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You said it right. opinion polls have little truth. They always show less seats to BJP. Like they did in Rajasthan , MP and chhatisgarh. BJP will come to power with 300+ seats. Pappu will be in Jail for his rape charge and his swiss bank accounts money.
 
You said it right. opinion polls have little truth. They always show less seats to BJP. Like they did in Rajasthan , MP and chhatisgarh. BJP will come to power with 300+ seats. Pappu will be in Jail for his rape charge and his swiss bank accounts money.
:laughcry::laughcry::laughcry::laughcry::laughcry::laughcry::laughcry::laughcry::laughcry::laughcry:
 
Washington: More than three-fifths of Indian voters favour the opposition BJP in the upcoming general elections as against less than one-fifth for the ruling Congress, a major American survey released yesterday said.

"With the Indian parliamentary elections just weeks away, the Indian public, by a margin of more than three-to-one, would prefer the Hindu-nationalist opposition Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) to lead the next Indian government rather than the Indian National Congress (INC), which heads the current left-of-centre governing coalition," Pew Research said.

While the survey in which BJP is preferred by 63 per cent of the respondents against 19 per cent for the ruling Congress does not project the number of seats the two parties would get in the polls, the survey said Narendra Modi, the BJP's prime ministerial candidate, is more popular than the putative Congress candidate Rahul Gandhi.

The Pew Research Centre survey was conducted between December 7, 2013 and January 12, 2014 and included face-to-face interviews with 2,464 randomly selected adults, in states and territories that are home to roughly 91 per cent of the Indian population.

The margin of error is 3.8 per cent.

According to the survey, just 29 per cent of Indians are satisfied with the way things are going in India today; 70 per cent are dissatisfied.

"More than six-in-ten Indians (63 per cent) prefer the BJP to lead the next Indian national government. Just two-in-ten (19 per cent) pick the Indian National Congress. Other parties have the support of 12 per cent of the public. BJP backing is consistent across age groups. And support is almost equal between rural (64 per cent) and urban (60 per cent) Indians," the survey showed.

Northern states Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan, Haryana, Punjab and Delhi which together are home to more than 400 million people, give the BJP its highest level of support, with 74 per cent saying they want it to lead the next government.

"The party's weakest backing (54 per cent) is in the western states of Maharashtra, Chhattisgarh and Gujarat (led by Modi as chief minister). Congress' strongest regional support (30 per cent) is in the eastern states of Odisha, Bihar, West Bengal and Jharkhand, among India's poorest areas and home to 270 million people," Pew said.

A majority says the BJP (58 per cent) is likely to be more successful than the Congress (20 per cent) in creating employment opportunities in the future.

"A similar proportion of the Indian public (56 per cent) say BJP would do a better job than Congress (20 per cent) in reducing terrorism. There is equal belief (56 per cent) that the BJP will do more to combat corruption. Only 17 per cent say Congress would do a better job dealing with this issue," Pew said.

63 per cent Indians favour BJP in polls, says US survey | NDTV.com
 
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