Indore: Takes dig at Congress indore After a candidate for a Lok Sabha seat withdrew from the race at the last minute, Madhya Pradesh Chief Minister Mohan Yadav said it was not his party’s fault if “the groom ran away before the wedding”. Indore candidate Akshay Kanti Bam withdrew his nomination on April 29, the last date of withdrawal, and subsequently joined the Bharatiya Janata Party. You were shocked.bjp).
“The Congress is claiming that the BJP has done something wrong in Indore. What is our fault? It is like inviting the whole village,” Yadav said at a BJP campaign rally in Betma near Indore. People attend a wedding banquet, but the groom runs away before the wedding.
The chief minister said the opposition party, which has no candidate in the May 13 Indore elections, called on local voters to press the NOTA (none of the above) button, which was an affront to democracy.
“If someone’s child runs away from home, whose fault is it? They are your children and you should take care of them,” he said.
Yadav also participated in a road show in Indore city in support of the BJP candidate and sitting MP Shankar Lalwani.
Yadav calls the opposition Indian group the “Garmandia” alliance, recalling the epic Ramayana and the city of Lanka, the capital of villain Ravan.
“These arrogant people were born in Lanka during the time of Lord Ram 1.7 million years ago. Due to their intellectual bankruptcy, they posed as saffron monks and came to kidnap Sita,” the chief minister said during the roadshow.
Appealing to voters to reject the Congress’ call to opt for NOTA, he said, “Mother Sita made the mistake of crossing Lakshman Rekha, but the people of Indore should make up their minds and never cross Lakshman Rekha under any circumstances. Card.
Yadav hit out at state Congress chief Jitu Patwari from Indore, whom he said had lost the Rau seat in the district in last year’s assembly elections. He was scared to contest the Lok Sabha elections after giving the ticket to the BJP candidate Madhu Verma.
On the other hand, even some 80-year-old Congress leaders are running, he added.
Yadav mentioned that the Congress had left the Khajuraho Lok Sabha constituency to the Samajwadi Party as part of the seat-sharing agreement, which he claimed showed that the Congress was afraid of elections.
“The Congress is claiming that the BJP has done something wrong in Indore. What is our fault? It is like inviting the whole village,” Yadav said at a BJP campaign rally in Betma near Indore. People attend a wedding banquet, but the groom runs away before the wedding.
The chief minister said the opposition party, which has no candidate in the May 13 Indore elections, called on local voters to press the NOTA (none of the above) button, which was an affront to democracy.
“If someone’s child runs away from home, whose fault is it? They are your children and you should take care of them,” he said.
Yadav also participated in a road show in Indore city in support of the BJP candidate and sitting MP Shankar Lalwani.
Yadav calls the opposition Indian group the “Garmandia” alliance, recalling the epic Ramayana and the city of Lanka, the capital of villain Ravan.
“These arrogant people were born in Lanka during the time of Lord Ram 1.7 million years ago. Due to their intellectual bankruptcy, they posed as saffron monks and came to kidnap Sita,” the chief minister said during the roadshow.
Appealing to voters to reject the Congress’ call to opt for NOTA, he said, “Mother Sita made the mistake of crossing Lakshman Rekha, but the people of Indore should make up their minds and never cross Lakshman Rekha under any circumstances. Card.
Yadav hit out at state Congress chief Jitu Patwari from Indore, whom he said had lost the Rau seat in the district in last year’s assembly elections. He was scared to contest the Lok Sabha elections after giving the ticket to the BJP candidate Madhu Verma.
On the other hand, even some 80-year-old Congress leaders are running, he added.
Yadav mentioned that the Congress had left the Khajuraho Lok Sabha constituency to the Samajwadi Party as part of the seat-sharing agreement, which he claimed showed that the Congress was afraid of elections.