Close X
Saturday, September 21, 2024
ADVT 
National

Watch: Modi Takes Dig At Rahul Gandhi, Criticises Opposition, But Seeks Support To Run Government

IANS, 03 Mar, 2016 12:08 PM
    Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Thursday reached out to the opposition for its support to run the government smoothly and invoked late Congress stalwarts and prime ministers Jawaharlal Nehru, Indira and Rajiv Gandhi for peaceful functioning of parliament.
     
    In his over an hour-long speech, Modi, however, didn't speak about raging issues like crackdown on Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) students and death of Dalit scholar Rohith Vemula in Hyderabad University that had stalled parliament for two days earlier this week.
     
    "Parliament is a forum where different view points are put forward, where questions are being asked to the government, where government is made accountable and nobody is spared," Modi said, winding up the discussion in the Lok Sabha on the motion of thanks to President Pranab Mukherjee for his Address to parliament.
     
    "And in doing so, it would be great if we uphold parliamentary traditions" and let the Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha function "peacefully and responsibly", he said.
     
    Modi noted this was "not a sermon" but the "words of former prime minister Rajiv Gandhi". 
     
    He also recalled the statements of Nehru, Indira and India's first president Rajendra Prasad and urged the opposition for its support to pass crucial legislations, including the Goods and Services Tax (GST) bill.
     
    Modi said the opposition was suffering from an "inferiority complex". "Some people want to oppose for the sake of it. There are such bright MPs in the opposition, but they are not being allowed to speak. Nobody in the opposition must look stronger and this is the inferiority complex." 
     
    However, at the end of his speech, the prime minister toned down his aggression and sought the support of the Congress and other opposition parties to run the government for the sake of people and the country.
     
     
    "Let's walk shoulder-to-shoulder and do something for the country. I am new, you are experienced," Modi said. 
     
    "We need to make an atmosphere of improving trust. If you have suggestions, please do offer. I would like the government to adopt these habits. The government also needs to improve and this would not happen without your support. I need your support. I need you people, your experience."
     
    In an obvious attack on Rahul Gandhi, Modi returned the barbs the Congress leader had hurled at him on Wednesday in the Lok Sabha over the prime minister's reluctance to take the opposition on board over various issues.
     
    "Some people learn with age but some don't," Modi said.
     
    Modi didn't name Rahul Gandhi but recalled how he had in 2013 torn before reporters a controversial ordinance of the then Congress government on convicted lawmakers when then prime minister Manmohan Singh was visiting the US.
     
    "The ordinance was torn apart when the then honourable prime minister was in the US to meet (Barack) Obama. Please learn to respect elders," Modi said as Gandhi listened.
     
    MPs from the BJP and its allies thumped their desks in appreciation even as the opposition booed following Modi's remark.
     
    With the Congress repeatedly targeting the government over Modi's earlier opposition to MGNREGA, the prime minister said it was the Comptroller and Auditor General who had punched holes in the implementation of the the flagship rural job guarantee scheme. He said his government was improving its implementation and trying to generate assets under it. 
     
    "You have sown the roots of poverty so deep, there is no denying this," he said, adding sarcastically that if he tries to tackle it, he himself will get uprooted.
     
     
    He said the opposition criticism is not over our performance but "they are worried because we are doing better".

    MORE National ARTICLES

    25,000th Syrian Refugee Lands In Canada Marking Milestone For Liberal Program

    They were part of a plane load of refugees who touched down in Montreal.

    25,000th Syrian Refugee Lands In Canada Marking Milestone For Liberal Program

    Uber In Alberta Says It Will Shut Down Tuesday Unless Province Agrees To Changes

    Uber In Alberta Says It Will Shut Down Tuesday Unless Province Agrees To Changes
    The manager for Uber in Alberta says the ride-sharing app will cease operating in the province on Tuesday unless the provincial government makes insurance and licensing changes.

    Uber In Alberta Says It Will Shut Down Tuesday Unless Province Agrees To Changes

    Canadian Taxpayers Federation Blasts MPs For Voting To Increase Office Budget

    Canadian Taxpayers Federation Blasts MPs For Voting To Increase Office Budget
     The Canadian Taxpayers Federation is criticizing the federal government for quietly approving a hefty increase to MPs' office budgets.

    Canadian Taxpayers Federation Blasts MPs For Voting To Increase Office Budget

    To Kill Or Not To Kill? OSPCA Seeks To Destroy 21 Alleged Fighting Dogs

    To Kill Or Not To Kill? OSPCA Seeks To Destroy 21 Alleged Fighting Dogs
    Twenty-one alleged fighting dogs sit in a kennel in an undisclosed location somewhere in Ontario, where they'll remain until a court decides whether they live or die.

    To Kill Or Not To Kill? OSPCA Seeks To Destroy 21 Alleged Fighting Dogs

    Polar Bear Encounters With Humans On The Rise, More Put In Churchill Jail

    Polar bear activity reports from the past three years show the number of documented cases in Churchill has jumped from 229 in 2013 to 351 last year.

    Polar Bear Encounters With Humans On The Rise, More Put In Churchill Jail

    B.C. Forestry Company To Suspend Operations For One Day After Workplace Death

    B.C. Forestry Company To Suspend Operations For One Day After Workplace Death
    TimberWest Forest Corp. spokeswoman Monica Bailey said an equipment operator was killed Friday afternoon at the company's Bonanza Lake site near Port McNeill.

    B.C. Forestry Company To Suspend Operations For One Day After Workplace Death