Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Congress to use MV Act fines as key poll plank in state elections

- Sunetra Choudhury sunetra.choudhary@hindustant­imes.com

REPORTS FROM VARIOUS LOCATIONS ACROSS INDIA HAVE MENTIONED HEFTY FINES BEING LEVIED ON MOTORISTS AND TRUCK DRIVERS

NEW DELHI: The Motor Vehicles Act 2019 is set to play a role in the upcoming electoral battle in three states. The Congress party plans to use the hefty fines, as high as ₹20,000, and the refusal of several states including those ruled by Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), to implement the law as ammunition in the election campaign in Maharashtr­a, Haryana and Jharkhand.

Newly appointed Haryana Pradesh Congress Committee chief Kumari Selja said the MV Act will definitely be one of the issues, not the only one, the party will raise in the campaign. The party chose to highlight the issue after the MV Act confronted a backlash across the country, Selja said.

Until now, Gujarat, Maharashtr­a and Uttarakhan­d -- all governed by the BJP -- and opposition-ruled states like West Bengal and Madhya Pradesh have either reduced the fines prescribed under the Act or refused to implement it altogether.

Selja said the Act’s implementa­tion was an instance of the BJP executing unpopular policies, explaining why the Congress stood a chance in the state polls in Haryana, where just months ago in the general elections, the BJP won all 10 Lok Sabha seats. “Those issues were different that time and (now) people want things on the ground. Look at this latest thing (MV Act). I mean go down any road in Haryana, people are reeling under this Act,’’ she said.

Reports from various locations across India have mentioned hefty fines being levied on motorists and truck drivers for violating traffic rules under the new law, whose backers have called it a deterrent to rash driving and accidental deaths .

“Saving lives is one thing and extortion is another,’’ Selja said, “Which was the first state to oppose it? It was the model state of Gujarat. A model state doesn’t believe in what the government of India is doing.’’

Minister for road transport and highways Nitin Gadkari’s office declined to react. Haryana BJP spokespers­on Rajeev Jaitly said that it showed Congress’s negative mindset.

“The MV Act is for people’s safety. Are they trying to say that rural people’s lives don’t go in accidents? Why does Congress always do negative politics? ’’ said Jaitly.

One Congress strategist who HT spoke to said that the party was firming up ways in which to use the implementa­tion of the MV Act in the election campaign. “There’s no point getting into security issues like Balakot and this issue is one that the BJP is firefighti­ng with so it would be good t o use t hat,’ ’ he s ai d, requesting anonymity.

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