Share

From this page you can share BJP's fall in Rajasthan, Delhi a hit-wicket: Advani to a social bookmarking site or email a link to the page.
Social WebE-mail
Enter multiple addresses on separate lines or separate them with commas.
BJP's fall in Rajasthan, Delhi a hit-wicket: Advani
(Your Name) has forwarded a page to you from NewsX
(Your Name) thought you would like to see this page from the NewsX web site.

BJP's fall in Rajasthan, Delhi a hit-wicket: Advani

Tue-Dec 16, 2008

New Delhi / Press Trust of India

A day after India pulled off a sensational test victory over England, senior BJP leader L K Advani on Tuesday sought to describe political events in cricket parlance saying his party suffered a "hit wicket" in Rajasthan and

Delhi where Congress had no capable "bowlers" to strike.

"No bowler in Congress is capable of bowling out BJP. The possibility is only of a hit-wicket like it happened in some states in the Assembly polls," Advani told a meeting of the BJP Parliamentary Party meeting in the capital.

Advani, the party's Prime Ministerial candidate, also asked leaders and cadres to focus on corruption under UPA regime along with issues of terrorism and price rise in the run up to the Lok Sabha elections.

The senior leader said the BJP failure in Delhi was primarily due to "selection of wrong candidates" while it was "internal contradictions" in Rajasthan.

"Although terrorism and price rise would remain an issue, there is also a need to take to the people the issues of corruption under the UPA regime and more specifically the cash-for-vote scam," he said.

According to BJP sources, the saffron party, which has failed on terrorism plank in the Assembly polls campaign, is planning to rake up corruption and equate it with Bofors scandal during the Lok Sabha campaign.

Touching upon the victory in Madhya Pradesh where BJP was voted to power for the second time, Advani asked party leaders to take lessons from it.

Tuesday's meeting also gave a farewell to Deputy Leader in Lok Sabha V K Malhotra, who resigned from the Lower House, after being elected to Delhi Assembly.

Six other party MPs, who were elected to different assemblies, also put in their papers on Tuesday.
Rate This Article:
No votes yet