May win Telangana, definitely winning Chhattisgarh, MP; very close in Rajasthan: Rahul
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Congress leader Rahul Gandhi in a file photo.

May win Telangana, definitely winning Chhattisgarh, MP; 'very close' in Rajasthan: Rahul

Congress leader asserts that the Opposition is adapting and working together and the BJP is "in for a surprise" in the 2024 General Elections


Expressing optimism for the forthcoming assembly elections, Congress leader Rahul Gandhi on Sunday (September 24) said that the party is poised for victory in Madhya Pradesh and Chhattisgarh, while the odds are in favor of winning Telangana. In Rajasthan, a closely contested race is anticipated, with the party confident of emerging victorious.

Rahul also referred to the row over BJP MP Ramesh Bidhuri's derogatory remarks against BSP leader Danish Ali in Lok Sabha, alleging that the BJP indulges in such tactics to distract from the demand for a caste census.

He asserted that the opposition is adapting and working together and the BJP is "in for a surprise in 2024" general elections.

'Distraction strategy'

Speaking at a conclave organised by the Pratidin Media Network of Assam, Gandhi also said the idea of 'One Nation, One Election' was aimed at distracting from real issues of the people.

"It's one of the BJP's distraction strategies," he asserted.

The main issues in India are concentration of wealth, huge inequality in wealth, massive unemployment, huge unfairness towards the lower caste, OBCs, and tribal communities, and price rise, he said.

"Now, the BJP can't contest those. So 'let's have Mr. Bidhuri make a statement. Let's get together and sort of have elections together. Let's change the name of India'. This is all distraction. We know it, we understand it. And we're not going to let them do it," he said.

He said that his party not winning any of the states in the upcoming state polls is out of the question.

Assembly polls are scheduled to take place in Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Telangana and Mizoram.

Asked about the party's chances, Rahul said, "I would say, right now, we are probably winning Telangana, we are certainly winning Madhya Pradesh, we are certainly winning Chhattisgarh. Rajasthan, we are very close, and we think we will be able to win. That is what it is looking like, and by the way, that is also what the BJP internally is saying."

"The Congress learnt a very important lesson in Karnataka that the BJP wins elections by distracting and not allowing us to construct our narrative and so we fought the polls constructing our party's narrative."

"What you are seeing today, this gentlemen Mr. Bidhuri and then suddenly Mr. Nishikant Dubey, all this is the BJP trying to distract from the idea of the caste census. They know that the caste census is a fundamental thing that the people of India want and they don't want to have that discussion," the former Congress chief said.

"Every time we bring a point on the table, they use this type of stuff to distract us and we have learnt now how to deal with it," he said.

"What we did in Karnataka is we gave a clear vision for the state, 'this is the social security programme that we are going to set up for you' and then we control the narrative. If you look at the Telangana polls, we are controlling the narrative, the BJP is not even in the narrative, it is gone. The BJP has been decimated and it is over in Telangana," Rahul said.

He claimed that the Congress is controlling the narrative in Madhya Pradesh and Chhattisgarh in the run up to the polls there.

"If you speak to people in Rajasthan on what is the issue in terms of anti-incumbency, they will tell you they like the government," he said.

'BJP controls the media'

"We are adapting in a situation where the BJP controls the media. Don't think the opposition is not capable of adapting, we are adapting, we are working together, we are 60 per cent of India's population. BJP is in for a surprise in 2024 (Lok Sabha polls)," he said.

Rahul also said that the Women's Reservation Bill can be implemented "tomorrow morning" and all that is required to be done is to state that 33 per cent of the seats will be reserved in the Lok Sabha and Vidhan Sabhas.

There is no connection between women's reservation and census or between women's reservation and delimitation, he argued.

Rahul also claimed that the government came up with the idea of a special session to distract from media reports in newspapers such as Financial Times on the Adani matter.

"The first thing they were planning to do was to change India to Bharat… but there was a huge backlash, they realised people will not like this, so put that in the background and came up with this," he said.

"The government is saying that the women will reap benefit of the bill after 10 years but the Congress wants it now," he said.

Lessons learnt from Bharat Jodo Yatra

During the interaction, the Congress leader also talked about his recent Ladakh visit during which he toured the Union Territory on a motorcycle.

He said it allowed him to continue the Bharat Jodo format in a different way.

On his learnings from his over 4,000 km Kanyakumari to Kashmir Bharat Jodo Yatra, Rahul said that in 21st century India, the communication architecture is so captured by the BJP that it is practically impossible to speak to the people of India through that.

"It is very clear that my YouTube channel, my Twitter, they are all suppressed. The yatra was a necessity for us. No matter what the opposition says, it does not go through without distortion in the national media," he said.

"Big learning was old school communication going and meeting people, which Mahatma Gandhi ji pioneered in the modern era, others pioneered in older times, that still works," he said.

No matter how much energy the BJP put, no matter how much the media tried to distort, it did not work, because there was a direct connection, Rahul said.

"For every story BJP media was trying to put in there were thousands of videos coming in to counter that. It was almost like a reverse capture of the mass media," he said.

This problem is not just an Indian problem as it is being faced across the world, he argued.

"For me, personal learning was even more interesting. It is that where you think your limit lies, is nowhere your limit actually lies. Your limit is much further than you can imagine," he said.

(With inputs from agencies)

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