ETV Bharat / state

'కాపులకు ఇచ్చిన మాట నిలబెట్టుకున్నాను'

ఆత్మగౌరవాన్ని పోగొట్టుకుని జగన్‌ బతుకుతున్నాడని సీఎం చంద్రబాబు ధ్వజమెత్తారు. వైకాపా, తెరాస రెండూ ఒకటేనన్న చంద్రబాబు... వైకాపాకు ఓటు వేస్తే... కేసీఆర్​కు వేసినట్లేని పేర్కొన్నారు. వంగవీటి రాధాను తెదేపాలోకి ఆహ్వానించిన చంద్రబాబు ఈ వ్యాఖ్యలు చేశారు.

చంద్రబాబు
author img

By

Published : Mar 13, 2019, 10:12 PM IST

Updated : Mar 13, 2019, 11:39 PM IST

జగన్‌ అవకాశవాద రాజకీయాలు చూసి ప్రజలందరూ విసుగు చెందారని ముఖ్యమంత్రి చంద్రబాబు విమర్శించారు. అమరావతిలో వంగవీటి రాధాకృష్ణ తెదేపాలో చేరారు. ఈ సందర్భంగా చంద్రబాబు మాట్లాడుతూ... చరిత్ర కలిగిన కుటుంబం వంగవీటి కుటుంబమని... రాధాకృష్ణ సామాజిక బాధ్యత కలిగిన వ్యక్తి అని కొనియాడారు. 2004లో కాపులకు రిజర్వేషన్‌ ఇస్తామని వైఎస్సాఆర్‌ మేనిఫెస్టోలో పెట్టారన్న చంద్రబాబు... కాపు రిజర్వేషన్లను రెండుసార్లు మేనిఫెస్టోలో పెట్టి కాంగ్రెస్‌ నెరవేర్చలేదని గుర్తుచేశారు.

మాట్లాడుతున్న చంద్రబాబు

తాను అధికారంలోకి రాగానే కాపులకు ఇచ్చిన మాట నిలబెట్టుకున్నాన్న ముఖ్యమంత్రి... అగ్రవర్ణ పేదలకు కేంద్రం ఇచ్చిన 10 రిజర్వేషన్లలో కాపులకు ప్రత్యేకంగా 5 శాతం ఇస్తున్నామని చెప్పారు. విభజన చట్టంలోని అంశాలను భాజపా నిర్లక్ష్యం చేసిందన్న చంద్రబాబు...భాజపాకు లాలూచీ పడిన వైకాపా.. ప్రత్యేక హోదాను తుంగలో తొక్కిందని దుయ్యబట్టారు. జగన్‌ అధికారంలోకి వస్తే పోలవరం పూర్తి కాదన్నారు. హైదరాబాద్‌లోని ఆస్తుల్లో రాష్ట్రానికి రావాల్సిన వాటా రాలేదన్న చంద్రబాబు... తెలంగాణలో అందర్నీ భయపెట్టి కేసీఆర్‌ రెండోసారి గెలిచారని ఆరోపించారు. రాష్ట్రంలో జరిగిన అభివృద్ధి తెలంగాణలో జరగలేదని చంద్రబాబు పేర్కొన్నారు.

జగన్‌ అవకాశవాద రాజకీయాలు చూసి ప్రజలందరూ విసుగు చెందారని ముఖ్యమంత్రి చంద్రబాబు విమర్శించారు. అమరావతిలో వంగవీటి రాధాకృష్ణ తెదేపాలో చేరారు. ఈ సందర్భంగా చంద్రబాబు మాట్లాడుతూ... చరిత్ర కలిగిన కుటుంబం వంగవీటి కుటుంబమని... రాధాకృష్ణ సామాజిక బాధ్యత కలిగిన వ్యక్తి అని కొనియాడారు. 2004లో కాపులకు రిజర్వేషన్‌ ఇస్తామని వైఎస్సాఆర్‌ మేనిఫెస్టోలో పెట్టారన్న చంద్రబాబు... కాపు రిజర్వేషన్లను రెండుసార్లు మేనిఫెస్టోలో పెట్టి కాంగ్రెస్‌ నెరవేర్చలేదని గుర్తుచేశారు.

మాట్లాడుతున్న చంద్రబాబు

తాను అధికారంలోకి రాగానే కాపులకు ఇచ్చిన మాట నిలబెట్టుకున్నాన్న ముఖ్యమంత్రి... అగ్రవర్ణ పేదలకు కేంద్రం ఇచ్చిన 10 రిజర్వేషన్లలో కాపులకు ప్రత్యేకంగా 5 శాతం ఇస్తున్నామని చెప్పారు. విభజన చట్టంలోని అంశాలను భాజపా నిర్లక్ష్యం చేసిందన్న చంద్రబాబు...భాజపాకు లాలూచీ పడిన వైకాపా.. ప్రత్యేక హోదాను తుంగలో తొక్కిందని దుయ్యబట్టారు. జగన్‌ అధికారంలోకి వస్తే పోలవరం పూర్తి కాదన్నారు. హైదరాబాద్‌లోని ఆస్తుల్లో రాష్ట్రానికి రావాల్సిన వాటా రాలేదన్న చంద్రబాబు... తెలంగాణలో అందర్నీ భయపెట్టి కేసీఆర్‌ రెండోసారి గెలిచారని ఆరోపించారు. రాష్ట్రంలో జరిగిన అభివృద్ధి తెలంగాణలో జరగలేదని చంద్రబాబు పేర్కొన్నారు.

RESTRICTION SUMMARY: PART NEWS USE ONLY/STRICTLY NOT TO BE USED IN ANY COMEDY/SATIRICAL PROGRAMMING OR FOR ADVERTISING PURPOSES/ONLINE USE PERMITTED BUT MUST CARRY CLIENT'S OWN LOGO OR WATERMARK ON VIDEO FOR ENTIRE TIME OF USE/NO ARCHIVE/NO RE-SALE
SHOTLIST
POOL - AP CLIENTS ONLY
ARCHIVE: London, UK - 24 June 2016
1. AERIAL of Houses of Parliament day after Brexit referendum
POOL - AP CLIENTS ONLY
ARCHIVE: Manchester - 24 June 2016
2. SOUNDBITE (English) Jenny Watson, Chairwoman of United Kingdom Electoral Commission:
"The UK has voted to leave the European Union."
3. Cutaway of people cheering
UK POOL - AP CLIENTS ONLY
ARCHIVE: London, UK - 24 June 2016
3. David Cameron, former British Prime Minister and his wife Samantha with their children hugging outside 10 Downing Street after he Cameron announced his resignation
UK POOL - AP CLIENTS ONLY
ARCHIVE: London - 13 July 2016
4. Prime Minister Theresa May speaking outside Downing Street following her visit to meet the Queen at Buckingham Palace
5. SOUNDBITE (English) Theresa May, UK Prime Minister:
"As we leave the European Union, we will forge a bold, new, positive role for ourselves in the world."
6. Various of May posing for photos with her husband, Philip May, outside 10 Downing
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
London - 13 March 2019
7. Set up shot of Adam Cygan, Professor of EU law at the University of Leicester
8. SOUNDBITE (English) Adam Cygan, Professor of EU law at the University of Leicester:
"I think Theresa May has done the best that she could do with the hand that she had, I mean partly she's a hostage to her own misfortune. She laid down these red lines in the Lancaster House speech which have really curtailed her position. She has not been able to move away from them and with the backstop, that is a consequence of her red lines. If you don't want a hard border in Ireland there needs to be some way in which goods can continue flowing across the border and what we see today for examples with these reduction of tariffs, the one place there will be no tariffs is on the island of Ireland, which is in essence a backstop by another mechanism."
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
ARCHIVE: Belcoo, Northern Ireland - 25 May 2016
9. Bridge between Blacklion, Republic of Ireland and Belcoo, Northern Ireland (UK)
10. Pan from river to bridge between Blacklion, Republic of Ireland and Belcoo, Northern Ireland (UK)
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
ARCHIVE:  Florence Court, Northern Ireland - 7 December 2017
11. Sign setup by activist near border, reading (English) "Respect the remain
UK POOL - AP CLIENTS ONLY
ARCHIVE: London - 17 January 2017
12. SOUNDBITE (English) Theresa May, UK Prime Minister (delivering Lancaster House speech):
"What I am proposing cannot mean membership of the single market. European leaders have said many times that membership means accepting the four freedoms of goods, capital, services and people, and being out of the EU but a member of the single market would mean complying with the EU's rules and regulations that implement those freedoms without having a vote."  
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
London - 13 March 2019
13 . SOUNDBITE (English) Adam Cygan, Professor of EU law at the University of Leicester:
"I think the Prime Minister has got very little time left because she has so personally tied herself up with this deal. I mean she might try to bring it back a third time and there is a suggestion that one more heave will get it over the line but I don't think it will unless there are substantive changes to the withdrawal agreement and the legal advice I cannot see those MPs voting for that deal again."
ASSOCIATED PRESS – AP CLIENTS ONLY
ARCHIVE: London - 11 December 2018
14. Various exteriors of parliament and pro-EU protesters, some chanting slogans
15. Sign saying (English) "You Can't Silence the People Forever Theresa!"
16. Polly Ernest, 54, anti-Brexit protester from Herefordshire, waving flag and chanting slogan
17. Pro-Brexit Protester holding a banner (English) "Walk away and pay the EU nothing."
18. Various of pro-Brexit protesters waving flag and chanting slogans, a man kissing British flag
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
London - 13 March 2019
19 . SOUNDBITE (English) Adam Cygan, Professor of EU law at the University of Leicester:
"I think the only way she would now resign is if she sees that the cabinet no longer supports her. The Conservative Party and this idea of the women or the men in grey suits and it really is the cabinet, it's the cabinet that will say 'we do not think that we can continue supporting your position' and that then would open up the position for her to resign. Whether we're there yet, I'm not sure. I think something still needs to be played out in relation to the certainty of having an extension in place, that bit would need to be sorted out first before the Prime minister would go."
PARLIAMENTARY RECORDING UNIT - NEWS USE ONLY/STRICTLY NOT TO BE USED IN ANY COMEDY/SATIRICAL PROGRAMMING OR FOR ADVERTISING PURPOSES/ONLINE USE PERMITTED BUT MUST CARRY CLIENT'S OWN LOGO OR WATERMARK ON VIDEO FOR ENTIRE TIME OF USE/NO ARCHIVE/NO RE-SALE
London - 13 March 2019
20. Wide of May rising to speak
21. SOUNDBITE (English) Theresa May, UK prime minister:
"I want to leave the European Union with a good deal. I believe we have a good deal.
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
London - 13 March 2019
22 . SOUNDBITE (English) Adam Cygan, Professor of EU law at the University of Leicester:
"I think history will judge her as a Remain prime minister who was trying to deliver Brexit and that will always be her problem. She never was someone who wanted to go down this route except that was the requirement when she became prime minister. However, she was in a position that she was trying to please both sides of her party and she was never going to be able to do that. History will judge her as someone who was probably actually quite politically naive in the end, thinking that she would bring together the Tory party after nearly 40 years of splits on Europe."
UK POOL - AP CLIENTS ONLY
ARCHIVE: Birmingham - 2 October 2016
23. Various of audience applauding at the British Conservative party's annual conference
24. SOUNDBITE (English) Theresa May, British Prime Minister:
"The referendum result was clear, it was legitimate. It was the biggest vote for change this country has ever known. Brexit means Brexit, and we're going to make a success of it."
25. Various of audience applauding
EBS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
ARCHIVE: Salzburg, Austria - 20 September 2018
26 Various of May next to European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker, Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte and Luxembourg Prime Minister Xavier Bettel at an informal summit to discuss migration, security and Brexit.
STORYLINE:
Her voice is hoarse from talking, her authority waning, and her overriding political goal — taking Britain out of the European Union with a negotiated deal — seems like a mirage.
Yet British Prime Minister Theresa May keeps going, declining to resign despite two successive parliamentary defeats of historic proportion.
She is still pushing her agreement, ignoring ample evidence that Parliament won't buy it and the Europeans won't sweeten it.
Britons seem divided between expressing admiration for her fortitude and wondering how badly her head must hurt from continually banging it against the wall.
Her position is weak: May leads a minority government that depends on a small Northern Ireland party to keep her in power, and that party — and many of her own Conservatives — have twice voted against her withdrawal plan.
"I think the only way she would now resign is if she sees that the cabinet no longer supports her," said Adam Cygan, Professor of EU law at the University of Leicester.
May, 62, has survived two direct threats to her leadership, one from within her Conservative Party brought by Brexiteers unhappy with her moderate approach, and one brought by opposition Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn, who tried but failed to force a general election.
She did have to make one key concession, telling her own party she would not lead it into the scheduled 2022 election, clearing the way for a fresh face to take over.
As a result, many in her own Cabinet are jockeying for position in a bid to succeed her, and prominent figures like former Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson are also waiting in the wings. The mercurial Johnson has even styled his formerly shaggy hair, giving him a more statesmanlike appearance.
At times it seems May's moderate position on Brexit has displeased almost everyone, and her inability to win a vote in Parliament has exasperated European leaders, who spent more than two years working on the deal that is now floundering.
May has appeared stoic in the face of so much criticism, and hasn't given in to self-pity or anger.
One irony is that May didn't back Brexit in the first place. She served in the difficult job of Home Secretary when Prime Minister David Cameron called the 2016 referendum, and she argued that Britain's interests would be better served by staying in the EU.
That's one reason many Brexiteers are suspicious of her motives, and anxious to replace her with a politician seen as a true believer.
She did embrace Brexit after the referendum, and outsmarted and outmaneuvered more prominent figures, including Johnson and Justice Secretary Michael Gove, to become party leader and prime minister.
But she blundered badly by calling an early election in 2017 that resulted in her party losing its majority, which has made it much more difficult to win passage of the withdrawal agreement.
"I think history will judge her as a Remain prime minister who was trying to deliver Brexit and that will always be her problem," Professor Adam Cygan said.
"History will judge her as someone who was probably actually quite politically naive in the end, thinking that she would bring together the Tory party after nearly 40 years of splits on Europe," he added.
Britain's Parliament will vote on Wednesday on whether to leave the EU without a deal after MPs dealt a major blow to Prime Minister Theresa May on Tuesday, resoundingly rejecting her Brexit deal just 17 days before the UK is due to leave the bloc.
Lawmakers voted by 391 to 242 against the deal.
==========================================================
Clients are reminded:
(i) to check the terms of their licence agreements for use of content outside news programming and that further advice and assistance can be obtained from the AP Archive on: Tel +44 (0) 20 7482 7482 Email: info@aparchive.com
(ii) they should check with the applicable collecting society in their Territory regarding the clearance of any sound recording or performance included within the AP Television News service
(iii) they have editorial responsibility for the use of all and any content included within the AP Television News service and for libel, privacy, compliance and third party rights applicable to their Territory.
Last Updated : Mar 13, 2019, 11:39 PM IST
ETV Bharat Logo

Copyright © 2024 Ushodaya Enterprises Pvt. Ltd., All Rights Reserved.