New Delhi: BJP has gone all guns blazing against the opposition parties' recent joint statement accusing them of waging a "direct onslaught on the spirit of our nation and casting aspersions on our hardworking citizens."
BJP President J P Nadda, in an open letter to the fellow Indians, said the opposition parties "tried, tested, or I should say dusted and rusted approach of vote bank politics, divisive politics, and selective politics is no longer working" as Prime Minister Narendra Modi's emphasis on 'Sabka Saath, Sabka Vikas, Sabka Vishwas and Sabka Prayas' has seen Indians being empowered and getting the wings to rise further.
He also slammed the DMK for orchestrating a smear campaign against the Indian music maestro Ilaiyaraaja for the latter likening Prime Minister Narendra Modi with Babasaheb BR Ambedkar. Ilaiyaraaja has in the foreword of a book drawn parallels between Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Dr B R Ambedkar. The book titled Ambedkar & Modi: Reformers ideas, Performers implementation was launched on April 14 and the publisher on Twitter said, "the book is an academic attempt to bring to the forefront Ambedkar's vision and work across different domains and how the New India being built by Prime Minister Modi is furthering Ambedkar's ideals".
Nadda's rebuttal came in as a retort to the rival parties' joint statement attacking the Modi government over incidents of hate speech and communal violence. In the letter, Nadda said: "Unfortunately, this thrust towards development politics is being bitterly resisted by the rejected and dejected parties which are once again taking refuge in vote bank and divisive politics. Today, India is seeing two distinctive styles of politics - the NDA's efforts which are seen in their work and the petty politics of a group of parties, which is seen in their acerbic words."
"In the last few days, we have seen these parties come together yet again in letter (whether in spirit too, time will tell) in which they have waged a direct onslaught on the spirit of our nation and cast aspersions on our hardworking citizens," the BJP president said. The youth of India want opportunities, not obstacles, they want development, not divisions, he said, adding people across all faiths, age groups and different walks of life have come together to defeat poverty and take India to new heights of progress.
"I would urge the opposition to change track and embrace the politics of development. We owe this to our coming generations," he said. The results of the recently held assembly elections, in which the BJP won power in four of the five states, should be an eye opener for those who thrive on vote bank politics, he said. India's largest state on the electoral map (Uttar Pradesh), a coastal state (Goa), a state in the Northeast (Manipur) and a hill state (Uttarakhand) have given a resounding mandate to the BJP, he said, asserting India is seeing a pro-incumbency sentiment where developmental politics is being resoundingly rewarded.
The BJP also became the first party in many years to cross the 100 figure in the Rajya Sabha and got an absolute majority in the Uttar Pradesh legislative council, he added. "The opposition should introspect why the parties that ruled the nation for so many decades have been confined to the margins of history now," Nadda said. In his context, he noted the communal violence during a religious procession in Karauli in the Congress-ruled Rajasthan and took a swipe at opposition parties, asking what are the compulsions driving their haunting silence on the issue.