Dinesh Agarwal
Shimla; BJP state president Dr. Rajiv Bindal said that the political atmosphere created across the country around the Bihar elections was unprecedented and unimaginable. He remarked that the Congress is in a state of decline nationwide, adding that despite a month-long ‘listening tour’ by the party’s national president, the Congress was reduced to just six seats. Bindal alleged that the present Congress government in Himachal Pradesh has also slipped into a “paralysed condition”. He said people across the country continue to place their trust in Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Union Home Minister Amit Shah and BJP national president Jagat Prakash Nadda.
Bindal said the Congress government in Himachal Pradesh will complete three years on 11 December, but it has been “the most ineffective government in history”. He claimed the government has no moral right to celebrate its three-year term, while the BJP has consistently raised public issues over the past three years and remains committed to amplifying people’s voices.
BJP to hold massive protest in Dharamshala on 4 December
The BJP state president announced that the party will organise a major protest against the state government on 4 December at the Jorhwar Stadium in Dharamshala. A state-level committee has been formed for the event, with BJP state vice president Vipin Parmar as its in-charge, assisted by vice president Bihari Lal Sharma, vice president Pawan Kajal, senior spokesperson Trilok Kapoor and MLA Sudhir Sharma.
Bindal alleged that the three years of the Congress government have been marked by hardship for youth and the unemployed, financial deterioration in the state, rising debt, deteriorating law and order, and escalating crimes including murder, robbery, extortion and the spread of mafia activities.
He accused the government of failing farmers, workers, women and youth by making false guarantees and promises. Bindal said institutions like schools, colleges, hospitals, offices, tehsils, patwar circles and veterinary dispensaries have suffered due to closures and mismanagement. He described the three-year tenure as one of “lockdowns on development, nepotism, administrative collapse and broken commitments”, adding that promised benefits such as permanent jobs, restoration of the 58-year retirement age, pension jobs, one lakh jobs, five lakh employment opportunities, ₹1500 monthly allowance for 28 lakh women, ₹100 per litre milk price and ₹2 per kg cow dung have not been fulfilled.