While the BJP is grappling with growing dissent within itself, Congo is grappling with the same old factional struggle
Post Date – 08:00 AM, Tuesday – July 23rd 11th
Hyderabad: Although the ruling party Bharat Rashtra Samithi (BRS) is strengthening itself and attracting more people to the party ahead of the upcoming parliamentary elections, and the recent Atmeeya Sammelanams have also helped to revitalize and activate the party’s machinery, another On the other hand, the political situation has become quite severe.
The entire opposition appears to be in total disarray, with the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) struggling to deal with growing dissent within its ranks, and the Congress party seeing multiple sequels to the same old story of factional struggle.
The BJP, which is trying to establish itself as the main rival of the BJP, has seen one new defection after another almost every day.
The country’s leadership has attempted to quell growing dissent with a change at the helm, replacing the outspoken Bandi Sanjay with the apparently reluctant G Kishan Reddy, but the attempt has yet to gain traction within the party. Acceptance by the majority of conservatives, many see it as a victory for the newcomers, especially Eatala Rajendar. Many, from five-time MLA A Chandrashekar to veteran tribal leader D Ravindra Naik, expressed displeasure with the move.
Congress, on the other hand, has long resorted to factional tactics that have killed its political fortunes multiple times, and now civil unrest continues across the state.
Leaders of the state’s many former strongholds, from Nalgonda to Warangal to Khammam, are trying to put aside their differences, Telangana Congress Committee (TPCC) chairman Ray Vince Reddy (A Revanth Reddy) clearly can’t keep his family together. TPCC Chairman Revanth Reddy’s statement on “Chief Minister Seethakka” has just given his rivals an extra stick to beat him and each other.
