Claims on Kanhaiya

The Jat reservation agitation has divided both BJP and Congress in Haryana.
Claims on Kanhaiya

The Left and its sympathisers are all charged up with the Kanhaiya Kumar phenomenon. If the Opposition and the ruling dispensation are stunned into silence by the 29-year-old’s oratory, the Left leaders are no less surprised. Sitaram Yechury was the first to tweet on his “brilliant speech’’ shown on prime time across news channels, but quite surprisingly, the breaking news that he may campaign for the Left in West Bengal emanated from Kerala.

In Kolkata, the Left has not yet gone to town with Kanhaiya’s exploits. It seems the CPI and the CPI(M) cannot quite decide how to share his talents. The CPI(M) Bengal unit is apprehensive that if Kanhaiya campaigns extensively, CPI may steal the thunder. The JNUite, after all, is a member of AISF, the student wing of CPI.

The Jat division

The Jat reservation agitation has divided both BJP and Congress in Haryana. The OBC lobby in BJP has been putting pressure on the government to scuttle the Jat quota and have been coming in groups to Delhi to convince senior leaders and ministers. In Congress, Bhupinder Singh Hooda and Deepender Hooda are playing their own tune. The party high command is rather cut up with the Hoodas joining a Jat reservation dharna at Jantar Mantar in Delhi, without permission. The fault-lines have widened after Ashok Tanwar, the Dalit PCC chief of Haryana, issued show-cause notice to Hooda’s close aide Virendra for his alleged role in the violent agitation. As a consequence, Deepender, who used to be Rahul Gandhi’s shadow, is not be seen anywhere near him.

PM’s Pleasant Surprise

Prime Minister Narendra Modi rarely acknowledges the presence of fellow parliamentarians while going past them in the lobbies of the House. It seems there are so many first-timers in the 16th Lok Sabha and he finds it difficult to remember who’s from which party. But of late, many of them were in for surprise when the PM not only stopped by to smile and shake hands, but also exchanged “kaise ho?” (how are you) pleasantries.

Related Stories

No stories found.

X
The New Indian Express
www.newindianexpress.com