Himachal’s campaign of choppers comes to an end
The high decibel campaign for the 68 assembly seats in Himachal Pradesh that ended on Tuesday could be dubbed the election of choppers. The hills resonated with sounds of choppers as the bigwigs crisscrossed the state. The BJP had engaged nearly a dozen choppers for its star campaigners while the fundstarved Congress could arrange only four.
The Bharatiya Janata Party is trying to ride the momentum that it has had in recent years and the anti-incumbency factor to beat the ruling Congress party. The assembly elections have seen unusually belligerent campaigning as top leaders of both parties focused their attention on the hill state.
On the last day of the campaign allegations and counter allegation flew thick and fast. Union home minister Rajnath Singh addressed public meetings at Chamba and Hamirpur.
Minister of textiles Smriti Irani, Uttarakhand chief minister Trivendra Rawat and chief minister ministerial candidate Prem Kumar Dhumal turned out for the BJP, while for the Con-
SHIMLA:
gress, chief minister Virbhadra Singh and Punjab chief minister Amarinder Singh were lead campaigners on the last day.
“The use of money power in Himachal vitiated the atmosphere and has given birth to new culture but anyhow this kind of practice will have no benefit to BJP,” Virbhadra Singh said in Arki’s Kunihar.
Rajnath Singh held a press conference in Shimla in which he repeated a line taken by Prime Minister Narendra Modi earlier, that the Congress has conceded defeat in the state. Amid former prime minister Manmohan Singh’s allegation made late Monday that demonetisation had clogged the Indian economy, Singh said more such steps would be taken if required for the betterment of the country. “Such reformative steps give short term pain while long term gain,” the home minister said.