'Inheritance tax' issue to divert attention from failure of 'garibi hatao' campaign: Mayawati

A political row has erupted after Pitroda, president of the Indian Overseas Congress, talked about inheritance tax law in the US and referred to the ‘redistribution of wealth’ issue

Update: 2024-04-25 07:19 GMT

Bahujan Samaj Party supremo Mayawati at an election rally in Amroha. Photo: PTI

Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) president Mayawati on Thursday (April 25) seized on Congress leader Sam Pitroda's "inheritance tax" remark, saying it has got less to do with the welfare of the poor and more with diverting attention from the failure of the Congress' 'garibi hatao' campaign.

In a post on X, the BSP leader asserted that it is difficult for the Congress to get rid of its "tainted legacy".

‘Poverty could not be eradicated’

"Senior Congress leaders' advocacy of 'inheritance tax' on private property, like in the US, under the guise of redistribution of wealth in India seems less for the welfare of the poor and more a politically-motivated electoral effort to divert people's attention from the well-known failure of their 'garibi hatao' campaign," Mayawati said.

"As far as the question of justice for Dalits and deprived people in matters related to distribution of property and government land is concerned, because of the lack of right intentions of these governments, poverty, backwardness, compulsion to migrate could not be eradicated," she added.

"It is difficult for the Congress to get rid of such a tainted legacy," she asserted.

A political row had erupted after Pitroda, the president of the Indian Overseas Congress, talked about the inheritance tax law in the United States and referred to the "redistribution of wealth" issue.

Congress distances itself from Pitroda’s remark

The Congress distanced itself from Pitroda's remark, saying its sensationalisation was an attempt at diverting attention from Prime Minister Narendra Modi's "malicious" poll campaign.

Modi, however, seized the opportunity to step up the ruling BJP's blistering attack on the Congress on the issue of "wealth redistribution." In his poll rallies, Modi framed Pitroda's comments in his wider onslaught against the Congress, asserting that they have exposed its hidden agenda and that the party has become so removed from the country's social and family values that it wants to legally rob people of their assets and lifelong savings they want to bequeath to their children.

(With agency inputs)

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