We are left with only two days for the election and this one has been a very high profile one with Congress President Rahul Gandhi, Prime Minister Narendra Modi and BJP President Amit Shah ran this time around. Many rounds of campaigning has been done. Thursday Narendra Modi and Rahul Gandhi will engage in last minute campaigning, and that would mark the end of such public activities as per the EC’s directive.
Party workers can, however, continue with door-to-door campaigning in the constituency. CM Siddaramaiah has toured the entire state once. When compared to last time, this election poses an intricate and close challenge. Prime Minister Narendra Modi has seen this as a question of his party’s survival. Though he was to have wrapped his campaigning with 15 rallies in Karnataka, the number was later increased to 21. He spoke mostly unrelated and fake facts in his speeches. He spoke of Mudhol dogs in Jamakhandi, and then in Dharwad he mispronounced the name of Varakavi Bendre. His lies continued into daylight with his saying Vajpayee government which came in to power in 1996 had given Bharata Ratna to Dr B R Ambedkar while the posthumous award was accorded to the architect of Indian constitution by the government of former PM V P Singh in 1990 itself.
He then said President Ram Nath Kovind was the first Dalit to rise to that office. But, fact remains that India’s first Dalit president is K R Narayanan, and not Kovind. Continuing with his lies, Modi heaped praises on H D Devegowda in Udupi and then derided him in Bangalore when he came to campaign.
Though campaigning is usually restricted to Mangalore, Bangalore, Hubballi, Belagavi etc; Modi created a base for himself in Karnataka this time and made it his home till his campaigning ended. Looks like the fear of failure and losing has altered his ability to speak. He mispronounced the words in Kannada, personally criticized CM Siddaramaiah and kept the audience engaged. What he could not do however, is stick to a narrative and provide constructive criticism of the state government. He never broached any topics to train his guns on the state. Schemes such as Anna Bhagya have given the state good name since people didn’t have to starve even when they reeled under the drought. Migration had been checked with this and hence the anti-incumbency hasn’t been such a huge force in the state. But about 50,000 activists who arrived into Karnataka from other states, tried creating an artificial rage against Siddaramaiah by giving wrong information against state government in the households. Even then, they failed miserably.
BJP tried its best to create anti-incumbency against the state government by creating and placing advertisements in the media. Even the PM repeated the slogan ‘change the government’ in his speeches. IT department was roped in and some raids were conducted too. The whole standard of this campaigning hit the rock bottom. The PM tried saying the state government should have celebrated Onake Obavva jayanthi instead of Tipu Jayanthi when he addressed a rally in Chitradurga.
BJP leaders and Union Ministers tried creating communal disharmony all through their speeches, with Union Minister Ananth Kumar speaking with no control over his speech. However, the EC is yet to act on him. With the public campaigning ending today, one phase of the election seems to have been over with only voting left to be done.
There are serious doubts about people and party workers regarding the EVMs. The responsibility to sort out this apprehension lies with the EC, who has assured that VVPAT would be installed with the voting machines. Hence the voters will definitely know if their vote went to the intended person.
In the recent times, even the Election Commission has attracted criticism. Complaints of Narendra Modi govt taking everything into their control, which aren’t unfounded either. The postponement of poll dates in Gujarat had come under heavy criticism. The Delhi High Court had dismissed the step of Election Commission for having disqualified 20 MLAs of AAP. The court had said the government had not worked according to the interest and appropriateness of the whole aspect of disqualification.
The Election Commission has to work as per the framework irrespective of the ruling dispensation. But having tried to please the current government, EC was criticized heavily. This would lead to protection and upliftment of Democracy, the court had said.
The Karnataka General elections are a huge challenge for the EC to retain its credibility by conducting free and fair elections. It has to take a tough stance on code of conduct violations.
Free and fair elections are not just the prerogative of Election Commission, but the duty of many public institutions as well. The Mining mafia members have been entering politics to safeguard their interests, which lead to unfair practices in elections. The proof lies in the fact that 9000 voter ids were found stacked in one house in Bangalore. There are rumours that BJP wants to postpone these elections by way of blaming the congress. Conspiracies are aplenty to create communal, caste and religious unrest across the state. But the EC has to take a tough stance against this with able help from the governments that come into existence later. No matter how strong a man who is trying to drive a wedge in the name of caste, faith etc; the EC should take severe action against such people to ensure voting is done peacefully.
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Bengaluru (PTI): Targeting Chief Minister Siddaramaiah and the Congress government in Karnataka on corruption, BJP leader R Ashoka on Friday said, being foolish was forgivable, but being "shameless" in public life was not.
The Leader of Opposition in the state Assembly claimed that in just 30 months of its tenure, the Congress administration has broken every previous record on corruption-related controversies.
He was responding to Siddaramaiah's post on 'X' on Thursday hitting back at the BJP, stating that Upa Lokayukta Justice Veerappa's claims of "63 per cent corruption" were based on his report in November 2019, when BJP's B S Yediyurappa was the CM.
"But Ashoka, without understanding the Upa Lokayukta's statement properly, has ended up tying the BJP's own bells of sins onto our heads and has effectively shot himself in the foot," the CM had said, as he accused Ashoka of foolishness for trying to twist Veerappa's statement to target the current government.
Responding, Ashoka said, "it is one thing to be called foolish in politics, that can be forgiven."
"But in public life, especially in the Chief Minister's chair, one must never become shameless," Ashoka posted on 'X' on Friday addressing Siddaramaiah.
Noting that the CM himself had admitted on the floor of the Assembly that a Rs 87 crore scam took place in the Valmiki Development Corporation, he said that when a CM acknowledges such a massive irregularity inside the floor of the House, the natural expectation is immediate action and accountability.
"But instead of taking responsibility, you continue in office as if nothing has happened. What should the people of Karnataka call this, if not sheer shamelessness," he asked.
Pointing out that the CM's Economic Advisor and senior Congress MLA Basavaraja Rayareddy had publicly stated that under Congress rule, Karnataka has become No.1 in corruption, Ashoka said, "Yet, you still cling to the Chief Minister's chair without a moment of introspection. What should the people of Karnataka call this, if not sheer shamelessness."
Senior Congress MLA C R Patil had exposed the "money for House" racket in the Housing Department and even warned that the government would collapse if the details he has were made public, Ashoka said.
"Despite such serious allegations from within your own party (Congress), you neither initiated an inquiry nor acted against the concerned minister. What should the people of Karnataka call this, if not sheer shamelessness," Ashoka asked the CM.
Highlighting the "40 percent commission" allegation Congress made against the previous BJP government, the opposition leader said, the commission that the Siddaramaiah government appointed concluded that the accusation was baseless.
"After your own panel demolished your own claim, what moral right do you have to continue repeating that allegation. What should the people of Karnataka call this, if not sheer shamelessness," he asked.
For the last two and a half years, Karnataka has been 'drowning' in corruption, scandals, irregularities and allegations across departments. Ashoka said, "If I begin listing every case that emerged under your government, even 24 hours would not be enough."
"And the most tragic aspect of your administration is this: the unbearable pressure, corruption demands and administrative harassment under your government pushed several officers and contractors into extreme distress - including the suicide of Chandrasekharan which exposed the Valmiki Development Corporation scam - a sign of how deeply broken the system has become under your watch," he said.
Instead of fixing this hopeless environment, the government has tried to bury every complaint and silence every voice, he charged.
"Being foolish is forgivable, but being shameless in public life is definitely not."
"When your own ministers admit scams, when your own advisors certify Karnataka as No.1 in corruption, and when your own MLAs expose rackets inside your departments - clinging to power without accountability is not leadership. It is shamelessness in its purest form." PTI KSU
Earlier on Thursday Ashoka had demanded that the corruption case and allegations in the state against the Congress government be handed over to a CBI investigation, citing a reported statement by Upalokaykta Justice Veerappa alleging "63 per cent corruption", following which Siddaramaiah hit back at the BJP leader.
