Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

BJP will come back with 300+ seats: Goyal

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEWDELHI: Railways minister Piyush Goyal on Friday credited the NDA government with rescuing and strengthen­ing an economy that he said was in a shambles when it took office, and empowering citizens by providing them new platforms for innovation and entreprene­urship to flourish.

“We have absolutely not lost the narrative on the economy,” the minister, who held charge of the finance portfolio during the months that Arun Jaitley was away recuperati­ng from a surgery earlier this year, said in response to a question at the at the 16th Hindustan Times Leadership Summit.

The BJP-led NDA government’s handling of the economy has been questioned by opposition members amid a weakening rupee, high fuel prices, the piling-up of bad loans in the banking system and agrarian distress caused by sliding commodity prices. On Thursday, to ease the pain of consumers, the government cut the prices of petrol and diesel by ₹2.5 per litre and urged state government­s to follow suit.

Goyal said he was confident that the BJP will return to power in the 2019 general elections with 300 plus seats (it won 282 in 2014) and the NDA will get a two-thirds majority in the Lok Sabha. “We believe in action and people know we have achieved a lot in the past four years,” he said.

On the Railway, he outlined improvemen­ts carried out in infrastruc­ture by the NDA government.

NEWDELHI: Congress president Rahul Gandhi said on Friday he believed the Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) will tie up with his party for the 2019 Lok Sabha elections despite opting out of an alliance for the upcoming state polls.

Speaking after delivering the keynote address on the opening day of the 16th Hindustan Times Leadership Summit, Gandhi said the alliances in states are different from those at the national level.

“Mayawatiji has sort of indicated that. I think in the national elections, the parties will come together, particular­ly in Uttar Pradesh,” he said.

Asked if he does not rule out an alliance in the 2019 elections, Gandhi said, “That is the indication we have.”

The remarks came two days after Mayawati ruled out a tie-up with the Congress in Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan, accusing the Congress of being “arrogant” and “adamant” on not conceding to its demands during the seat-sharing negotiatio­ns.

She maintained both Gandhi and United Progressiv­e Alliance (UPA) chairperso­n Sonia Gandhi’s intentions in having an alliance with the BSP were honest. Mayawati had accused senior Congress leader Digvijaya Singh of “sabotaging” the tie-up.

Rahul Gandhi insisted the Congress was accommodat­ing in terms of seat adjustment­s in the poll-bound states.

“We were pretty flexible in the states. In fact, I was more flexible than some of our state leaders. But in the midst of conversati­on, they decided to go their own way,” the 48-year-old Congress chief said.

The BSP had demanded 50 of Madhya Pradesh’s 230 seats and 15 of the 90 in Chhattisga­rh. But the Congress was willing to concede nine in Chhattisga­rh and 20-22 in Madhya Pradesh. In Rajasthan, the Congress’s state unit had opposed a tie-up with any party.

The Congress president expressed confidence that his party will win assembly elections in Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan and Chhattisga­rh and also Telangana, which go to polls in the next few months.

“We are pretty confident…. I do not see the [lack of a] BSP alliance impacting us much in Madhya Pradesh. It would have been good thing to have but we will win the elections in Madhya Pradesh and Chhattisga­rh,” he said.

Rahul Gandhi said discussion­s with alliance partners is a two-stage process when asked if he stood by his statement during the Karnataka elections that he was willing to be the prime ministeria­l candidate if his party and the allies want that. “Stage one is to get together to defeat the BJP and stage two is once the elections are over, we will decide what happens. But we really do not know now what will happen then,” he said.

When pressed further, the Congress chief said, “If they want me yes sure I will [be the prime ministeria­l candidate].”

Rahul Gandhi had earlier described the issue as “divisive” and insisted that all the opposition parties should come onto one platform to oust the BJP from power in 2019.

Criticisin­g Prime Minister Narendra Modi for blaming the Congress for “everything that originated” in this country in the last 70 years, he said, “You can’t keep blaming us even when you are in power. If you give us that much importance, let us run the place. We will show you how to fix it.”

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 ?? VIRENDRA SINGH GOSAIN/HT PHOTO ?? Congress president Rahul Gandhi said his party was accommodat­ing in terms of seat adjustment­s with potential allies in pollbound states.
VIRENDRA SINGH GOSAIN/HT PHOTO Congress president Rahul Gandhi said his party was accommodat­ing in terms of seat adjustment­s with potential allies in pollbound states.

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