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Trump’s dominance in GOP frustrates some in Iowa eager for a competitive campaign

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Image: Reuters

The Iowa frenzy is typically in full force by now.

With less than three weeks until the Iowa caucuses formally usher in the presidential nomination process, White House hopefuls are usually in a heated competition. They fan out across the state and pack as many events into a single day as is humanly possible—all in a bid to appeal to undecided voters and lock down support that could lift them to victory in Iowa and keep them in the race for months to come.

But as the campaign intensifies ahead of the January 15 caucuses, the normal frenzy is subdued. While the schedule is filling up, former President Donald Trump is such a commanding force in the party that some voters worry the contest that normally transforms Iowa into the centre of the political world may turn out to be something of a snooze.

“It’s kind of frustrating,” said Jenna Maifeld, a 19-year-old student at the University of Iowa who is eager to participate in her first caucus but is disappointed with the campaign cycle’s lack of competition. “I feel like a lot of people’s voices aren’t being heard.” There’s still time for the dynamics of the race to shift. And Trump’s rivals are hardly ceding the state to him, working to convince voters that his victory isn’t inevitable. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis has effectively centred his campaign on Iowa, pumping it with advertising and crafting a robust travel schedule of events and media availabilities. Former United Nations Ambassador Nikki Haley is also campaigning throughout Iowa, stepping up criticism of Trump while laying the groundwork for a potentially stronger showing in New Hampshire, where the January 23 primary includes more independent voters.

The question is whether any of those efforts will notably erode Trump’s standing, a prospect some voters find unlikely at this point.

“A lot of candidates are hoping that one of these spears in his back will finally take him down, but I doubt it,” said Nick Peters, a 31-year-old from Prairie City who is also among the Iowa Republicans frustrated by Trump’s dominance.

Trump enters the final stretch before the caucuses, facing a host of challenges. He’s the subject of 91 criminal charges related to everything from his handling of classified information to efforts to overturn the 2020 presidential election. The Colorado Supreme Court and Maine’s top election official have recently declared Trump ineligible to appear on their states’ ballots, decisions the former president is likely to appeal to the US Supreme Court.

And Trump is embroiled in controversy over his harsh rhetoric towards immigrants, repeatedly using language that extremism experts say echoes writings from Adolf Hitler about the “purity” of Aryan blood, which underpinned Nazi Germany’s systematic murder of millions of Jews and other “undesirables” before and during World War II.

For now, however, Trump’s baggage appears to be doing little to deter a majority of Republican voters. In fact, Trump has sought to turn his vulnerabilities into something of an advantage, arguing that he’s been indicted on behalf of his supporters. He’s also aimed to turn around concerns that he poses a threat to democracy by accusing President Joe Biden of harnessing the power of government against a political rival. There’s no evidence that Biden or the White House had any influence on the Justice Department’s decision to criminally charge Trump.

It’s Trump’s impenetrable base of support that has left many feeling resigned to seeing his name on the ballot in November.

“If democracy is working fairly and if the country wants him, then it’s going to be him,” said Dylan Kooiman, a 21-year-old student at Dordt University in Sioux Centre, Iowa, who said it would be hard for him to support Trump given his legal battles. “It doesn’t always fall the way everyone wants it.” Iowans are historically proud of the role they play at the beginning of the presidential election calendar every four years. Voters are accustomed to intimate exchanges with candidates, who pay visits to living rooms, neighbourhood centres and county fairgrounds in an effort to connect and persuade.

The pride Iowans take in their role in shaping the presidential contest is also matched with a perennial anxiety that their status may not last forever. The final period ahead of the 2020 caucuses, which focused on Democrats, was unusually muted because many candidates, who were also senators, had to be in Washington to participate in Trump’s first impeachment trial. A bungled effort to report results contributed to Democrats removing Iowa from their leadoff spot, replacing it instead with South Carolina.

Republicans have kept Iowa in the opening position in the 2024 campaign. But like so many traditions, Trump has abandoned some long-held Iowa political practices, particularly when it comes to retail campaigning. He’s largely traded living rooms for rallies, prompting some criticism that he’s taking Iowa for granted.

Trump is stepping up his efforts in the closing weeks to prove that he’s willing to work for a win that’s so commanding that his rivals will have to give up. He is, for example, taking the rare step of holding four campaign events over two days in early January, appearing in rural western Iowa, in industrial eastern Iowa along the Mississippi River and making stops in between.

If he’s successful, he may be on a path to a race that few Americans appear eager to embrace. Nearly 3 in 10 US adults, or 28 per cent, say they would be dissatisfied with both Trump and Biden becoming their parties’ respective nominees, a recent AP-NORC poll showed.

Independents (43 per cent) are more likely than Democrats (28 per cent) or Republicans (20 per cent) to express their displeasure with both men gaining party nominations.

Rick Hyndman may be one of the thousands of Iowans who want to support Trump again, but he also thinks Trump needs to speak more to the middle.

In line to attend a Trump rally in Coralville, the 70-year-old local retiree was noncommittal, waiting to hear some signals from the former president that he could appeal to independents to ensure his electability in the general election. Hyndman thinks he could, by focusing on the issues and avoiding putting other people down.

Despite that concern, Hyndman thinks neither DeSantis nor Haley can beat him.

“I don’t see anybody stepping up,” he said. “We’ve been waiting.”

TMC eyes pivotal role in 2024, and the BJP hopes to make comeback after dismal 2023

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TMC eyes pivotal role in 2024, and the BJP hopes to make comeback after dismal 2023 3

Despite losing national party status, the Trinamool Congress remains a dominant political force in West Bengal, buoyed by a triumphant victory in the violence-marred rural polls and aiming to play a pivotal role in the national opposition alliance—India—ahead of the 2024 Lok Sabha polls.

Conversely, the BJP faced an exodus and electoral setbacks in 2023. The state leadership grappled with maintaining internal cohesion while attempting to capitalise on allegations, including graft charges against the Mamata Banerjee government.

The TMC aspires to uphold its political dominance in the 2024 Lok Sabha polls, actively contributing to forging a formidable opposition in the run up to the parliamentary elections.

Simultaneously, the BJP, known for its strict control over dissidents, is placing its hopes on rural areas to stage a turnaround and mobilise its cadre base to maintain unity.

The erstwhile mighty CPI(M)-led Left Front, having lost its main opposition status to the saffron camp in recent years, has exhibited signs of recovery in bypolls and panchayat polls.

Despite a disappointing start to the electoral year, losing the minority-dominated Sagardighi seat to Congress-Left Front alliance, the party also relinquished its national party status due to lacklustre performances in various elections.

The withdrawal of national party status resulted from the TMC’s unsuccessful attempt to expand nationally and act as the linchpin of an opposition alliance against the BJP, culminating in its poor showing in Goa assembly polls and the civic election debacle in Tripura in December 2021.

Efforts to rectify the Sagardighi defeat included the induction of a Congress MLA into the party, accompanied by significant organisational restructuring at the grassroots level.

In emulation of the Congress’s Bharat Jodo Yatra, the TMC launched a mass outreach campaign, ‘Trinamool ey Nabajowar’ (new wave in Trinamool). Abhishek Banerjee, nephew of TMC supremo Mamata Banerjee, and considered the party’s de facto number two, led the campaign.

The TMC’s successful campaign translated into a sweeping victory in West Bengal’s rural polls, securing all 20 Zila Parishads in the three-tier panchayat system and winning 880 seats out of 928. The BJP secured 31 seats, while the Congress-Left Front alliance won 15 seats, with the remaining two going to others.

Buoyed by this success, the TMC assumed a leading role in forming the INDIA opposition alliance, comprising 28 anti-BJP parties across the country.

Despite these victories, challenges loom for Bengal’s ruling party, as its proposals for a swift seat-sharing deal, common manifesto, and narrative are yet to resonate among allies.

Even the proposal to nominate Congress president Mallikarjun Kharge as the opposition bloc’s PM candidate was turned down.

The withholding of MGNREGA dues by the Centre escalated into a major political issue in the state, leading to protests by Abhishek, along with TMC MLAs, MPs, ministers, and MGNREGA workers at Jantar Mantar in New Delhi, followed by a five-day sit-in outside Raj Bhavan.

The TMC leadership faced additional challenges with CBI and ED probes into various scams, resulting in battles fought both inside courtrooms and on the streets. The arrests of the TMC minister and senior leader Jyotipriyo Mullick in a ration distribution scam, added to the party’s woes.

As the party enters the New Year, it aims not only to reclaim Lok Sabha seats lost to the BJP in 2019 but also to strengthen its position in the state and play a pivotal role in the opposition alliance if the BJP falls short of a majority.

After nearly fifteen years, the possibility of a Congress–TMC alliance seems to be on the horizon, with both parties being partners in the INDIA alliance.

TMC leader Sougata Roy expressed confidence in making a ”clean sweep in the 2024 Lok Sabha polls and playing a key role in the national opposition front”.

The BJP, targeting 35 out of the 42 Lok Sabha seats from the state, has made fresh attempts to challenge the TMC by hitting the streets, although with nominal success.

Internal rebellion and a verbal duel over an organisational revamp characterized the party’s struggles since the 2021 assembly poll debacle.

Post the formation of the INDIA alliance at the national level, including the TMC, Congress, and CPI(M), the party has managed to arrest the slide in vote share to the Cong-CPI(M) alliance as the main opposition to the TMC.

In the Dhupguri assembly bypoll, the BJP lost to the TMC but retained the second position, unlike previous bypolls where the Cong-CPI(M) alliance replaced it as the main opposition.

”We hope to make a turnaround in the Lok Sabha polls in 2024. Just like 2019, this time too, we will come out with good results,” said BJP spokesperson Samik Bhattacharya.

The Congress, fighting for its existence in Bengal, is divided on the issue of alliance with the TMC. Some favour it on respectable terms, while others hope to continue the ongoing alliance with the Left Front.

The grand old party aims to rejuvenate its cadre base in the state during Rahul Gandhi’s Bharat Nyay Yatra, which will pass through West Bengal.

Political analyst Biswanath Chakraborty remarked, ”It has to be seen whether the allegations of corruption have dented TMC’s image or not.” For the BJP, the challenge would be ”to keep its flock together and retain the seats it had won in 2019,” he said. On the administrative front, clashes between Governor C V Ananda Bose and TMC government, involving issues such as university VC appointments, the state’s foundation day, withholding of MGNREGA dues by the Centre, and panchayat poll violence, mirrored past tensions between the government and former Governor Jagdeep Dhankhar, currently serving as the Vice-President of India. Santiniketan, where Nobel laureate Rabindranath Tagore built Visva-Bharati over a century ago, was inscribed on UNESCO’s World Heritage List in September.

As the year concludes, Rajeev Kumar was appointed the new DGP, for whom CM Mamata Banerjee had staged a dharna in 2019 against CBI’s attempt to question the IPS officer in Saradha chit fund case.

Gujarat police question 20 passengers of the Nicaragua-bound flight sent back by France

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Gujarat police question 20 passengers of the Nicaragua-bound flight sent back by France 5

At least 20 passengers from Gujarat who were on the Nicaragua-bound flight which was sent back mid-route from France have been quizzed by police in a bid to unearth a suspected illegal immigration network operating from the state, a senior official has said.

The Nicaragua-bound aircraft, an Airbus A340 carrying 276 passengers, was grounded in France for four days over suspected human trafficking. It landed in Mumbai in the early hours of December 26.

According to a senior state Crime Investigation Department (CID) official, those passengers included at least 60 from Gujarat, who have already reached their respective native places in the state.

They are being questioned by the department to find out whether they had any plans to cross into the United States of America illegally after reaching Latin America, the official said on Friday.

”They were sent back from France. There was a rumour that they had planned to enter the US illegally after landing in Nicaragua. In their statements, they told us they were going there as tourists. We are going into the details to find out who were the agents behind their trip,” said S P Rajkumar, Additional Director General of Police, CID—Crime and Railways.

Of the 60 who returned, some 20 have already been grilled by the agency, he added.

”We are verifying their documents to ascertain whether they used genuine or forged documents to proceed to Central America. We will also check their financial transactions because, ideally, they should not have paid more if they were going there as normal tourists and not with any other intention,” said the senior IPS officer.

”Though we have started questioning, no one is divulging facts. They claim they went there as tourists. We are investigating the case from all angles,” he added.

On Tuesday, Superintendent of Police, CID (Crime), Sanjay Kharat had said the CID had formed four teams to investigate the issue.

”The CID (crime) wants to take action against agents who had promised help to the victims to enter the US and other countries (illegally). We have formed four teams which will get information from the victims regarding promises made to them by these agents,” he had told reporters.

The chartered flight, which was operated by Romanian charter company Legend Airlines and bound for Nicaragua, landed at Vatry near Paris on December 21 for a technical stopover en route from Dubai when the French police intervened.

French authorities launched a judicial investigation into the conditions and purpose of the trip, with a unit specialising in organised crime investigating suspected human trafficking.

Nicaragua has become a popular destination for those seeking asylum in the US. As many as 96,917 Indians attempted to enter the US illegally in the financial year 2023, signalling a 51.61 per cent jump from the previous year, according to data made available by the US Customs and Border Patrol (CBP).

At least 41,770 of those Indians attempted to enter the US via the Mexican land border, CBP data shows.

Flights to Nicaragua or third countries where obtaining travel documents is easy have come to be known as ‘dunki’ flights.

ED summons Jharkhand CM Soren for seventh time in money laundering case

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ED summons Jharkhand CM Soren for seventh time in money laundering case 7

The Enforcement Directorate issued a summons to Jharkhand Chief Minister Hemant Soren for questioning in connection with an alleged land scam, sources said on Saturday. CM Soren has been asked to depose at the federal agency’s office and get his statement recorded on a date convenient to him in the case under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act, 2002, the sources said.

Notably, this is the seventh time CM Soren has been issued a summons by the agency. “ED issued a seventh summons to CM Hemant Soren under Section 50 of the PMLA, asking him to record his statement at the place, date, and time mutually convenient to him as well as the agency in ongoing land scam,” the sources said.

Earlier on December 12, CM Soren was asked to appear before the agency for questioning but the Chief Minister skipped the proceedings. The BJP earlier criticised the Jharkhand CM for continuously skipping the summons.

Soren was summoned by the ED earlier in mid-August in connection with a land ‘scam’ case. However, the CM ignored the summons, claiming that he was busy with the state’s Independence Day celebrations. He was asked again to appear on August 24 and September 9 but he skipped the dates, citing preoccupations.

The agency then issued its fourth summons to the Jharkhand CM, asking him to report to the agency on September 23. The CM had earlier threatened to move for legal proceedings against the Centre if it did not withdraw the summonses issued against him. In his letter to the agency, Soren said he had provided all necessary documents and information to the ED.

He wrote that if the ED needed any information, it could refer to the documents that he had already shared with the agency. However, he alleged that the ED summoned him on August 14 at the behest of its “political masters.”

NCP MP Amol Kolhe slams CM Shinde for not asking the Centre to reconsider onion export ban

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NCP MP Amol Kolhe slams CM Shinde for not asking the Centre to reconsider onion export ban 9

NCP MP Amol Kolhe on Friday slammed the Eknath Shinde-led Maharashtra government for not persuading the Centre to lift the ban on onion exports.

Kolhe, who is leading a farmers’ protest organised by the opposition Maha Vikas Aghadi (MVA) coalition, was addressing a meeting at Khadki in Pune.

The three-day ‘Shetkari Akrosh Morcha’ began at Shivneri Fort, the birthplace of Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj, and will culminate at the collector’s office in Pune on December 30.

”While Shinde claims his government belongs to farmers, he and the deputy chief ministers have not raised the demand to lift the ban on onion exports,” the NCP leader said.

The Centre has banned onion exports until March 31, 2024, to increase domestic availability and keep prices in check.

Kolhe said the Centre announced the ban at a time when farmers felt they would get a good price for their onion crop.

”Onion producers have suffered losses to the tune of Rs 1,200 crore, but the ‘one full and two doubtful’ government in the state cannot ask the Centre to reconsider the export ban,” the legislator from Shirur said.

In a veiled jibe at Deputy Chief Minister Ajit Pawar, Kolhe said those responsible for the political earthquake in Maharashtra have claimed that they have taken the stand for the sake of development.

Ajit Pawar had recently said the NCP faction led by him will contest from Shirur and defeat Kolhe in the upcoming Lok Sabha elections.

The actor-turned-politician had attended Ajit Pawar’s swearing-in in July but had preferred to stay with NCP president Sharad Pawar, following the split in the party.

Iran executes four people for alleged links with Israel’s Mossad

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Image: REUTERS/Leonhard Foeger

Iran executed on Friday four people and sentenced several others to prison for having alleged links with Israel’s Mossad security service, local media reported.

Mizan, the news website affiliated with the country’s judiciary, said three men and one woman were executed Friday morning. It identified the men as Vafa Hanareh, Aram Omari, and Rahman Parhazo, and the woman as Nasim Namazi. The report didn’t say how the deaths were carried out, but Iran usually applies hanging.

The four were charged with kidnapping several Iranian security forces to extract intelligence information, Mizan reported. They were also accused of setting fire to the cars and apartments of some of Iran’s intelligence agents.

The report also said several others, working with the same group, were each sentenced to 10 years in jail, without giving further details.

This came less than a week after an alleged Israeli airstrike killed a high-ranking Iranian general in Syria.

Iran and Israel have long accused each other of spying and waging a shadow war for years.

In November, United Nations chief Antonio Guterres said Iran was carrying out executions “at an alarming rate,” putting to death at least 419 people in the first seven months of the year.

Iran said it executed an Israeli Mossad spy earlier this month, charged with releasing classified information. In January, former Iranian-British defense ministry Ali Reza Akbari was hanged for alleged cooperation with Britain’s Secret Intelligence Service.

In 2020, Iran executed a man convicted of leaking information to the US and Israel about a prominent Islamic Revolutionary Guard general who was later killed by a US drone strike in Iraq.

Anyone can protest, but no one should damage public property: K’taka CM on vandalism of shops

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Anyone can protest, but no one should damage public property: K'taka CM on vandalism of shops 12

Asserting that signboards in Karnataka should display information in Kannada, Chief Minister Siddaramaiah issued a warning on Thursday against taking the law into one’s own hands, saying anyone can protest but no one should cause damage to government or public property.

He was reacting to the large-scale vandalism in Bengaluru on Wednesday by activists of the pro-Kannada outfit Karnataka Rakshana Vedike (T A Narayana Gowda faction) targeting shops and business establishments that did not display Kannada signboards, advertisements, or name plates.

To a question on Kannada activists accusing the government of taking action against those fighting for the Kannada cause, and that they would teach Congress a lesson in the Lok Sabha polls, he said, ”We have not stopped them from protesting, but we have taken action against those who have taken the law into their hands… Election thing, let’s see when it comes; the government is here to maintain law and order.” Stating that one’s conduct or behaviour should not disturb or harm others, the CM said, ”Anyone can protest, but no one should cause damage to government or public property and take the law into one’s own hands.”

North Korea’s Kim orders military to accelerate war preparations: State media

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North Korea's Kim orders military to accelerate war preparations: State media 14

North Korea leader Kim Jong Un has ordered his country’s military, munitions industry, and nuclear weapons sector to accelerate war preparations to counter what he called unprecedented confrontational moves by the U.S., state media said on Thursday. Speaking on the policy directions for the new year at a key meeting of the country’s ruling party on Wednesday, Kim also said Pyongyang would expand strategic cooperation with “anti-imperialist independent” countries, news agency KCNA reported.

North Korea has been expanding ties with Russia, among others, as Washington accuses Pyongyang of supplying military equipment to Moscow for use in its war with Ukraine, while Russia provides technical support to help the North advance its military capabilities. “He (Kim) set forth the militant tasks for the People’s Army and the munitions industry, nuclear weapons and civil defence sectors to further accelerate the war preparations,” KCNA said.

On Thursday, South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol visited a frontline military unit in the eastern county of Yeoncheon to inspect its defence posture and called for an immediate retaliation if there was any provocation from North Korea. “I urge you to immediately and firmly crush the enemy’s will for a provocation on the spot,” Yoon told troops.

During the party plenum, North Korea’s Kim also laid out economic goals for the new year, calling it a “decisive year” to accomplish the country’s five-year development plan, KCNA said. “He … clarified the important tasks for the new year to be dynamically pushed forward in the key industrial sectors,” and called for “stabilising the agricultural production on a high level.”

The North has suffered serious food shortages in recent decades, including famine in the 1990s, often as a result of natural disasters. International experts have warned that border closures during the COVID-19 pandemic worsened food security. North Korea’s crop output was estimated to have increased year-on-year in 2023 due to favourable weather conditions. But a Seoul official has said the amount was still far below what is needed to address the country’s chronic food shortages.

The 9th plenary meeting of the 8th central committee of the Workers’ Party of Korea kicked off on Tuesday to wrap up a year during which the isolated North enshrined nuclear policy in its constitution, launched a spy satellite and fired a new intercontinental ballistic missile. The days-long assembly of the party and government officials has been used in recent years to make key policy announcements. Previously, state media released Kim’s speech on New Year’s Day.

Let’s see how “Bharat Nyay Yatra” works for Congress

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Let's see how "Bharat Nyay Yatra" works for Congress 16

“Bharat Jodo Yatra” was a successful event but that failed to bring fate to Congress. In the recent elections, Congress had to face miserable defeats in many states. Rahul Gandhi will lead a two-month “Bharat Nyay Yatra” from January in a reappearance of his previous south-to-north parade last year. He wants to speak for the people and carry out the promise of “social, economic, and political justice” for them.

Beginning on January 14 and ending on March 20, this yatra will be from Manipur to Maharashtra, just months before the 2024 Lok Sabha elections. During Bharat Jodo Yatra Rahul Gandhi walked from one place to another but this time, he and his congress leaders and workers would travel by buses and cars. Buses are chosen for Bharat Nyay Yatra, with the aim of giving maximum access to people. There will be short stretches of walking sporadically during the march. The reason for choosing a bus yatra is to avail more access to people on the way. But it will also have short stretches of walking every now and then. His main focus is to reach the maximum number of people by going into the interiors. He is doing his best to revive his party and family relevance but the BJP shrewdly nullifies everything high-jacking mainstream media and social media.

Congress President Mallikarjun Kharge will flag off the yatra in Imphal, the capital of strife-torn Manipur. It will conclude in Mumbai on 20 March, covering 85 districts in 14 states and spanning 6,200 km. From Manipur, the yatra will enter Nagaland and go on to cover Assam, Meghalaya, West Bengal, Bihar, Jharkhand, Odisha, Chhattisgarh, Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan, Gujarat and Maharashtra. The Congress is part of the ruling alliance in two of these 14 states, Bihar and Jharkhand. West Bengal is governed by the Trinamool Congress, a constituent of the Opposition’s INDIA bloc. Rest of the states are mostly ruled by BJP and its allies and Odisha by the Biju Janata Dal, with the BJP being the principal Opposition. These 14 states account for 355 Lok Sabha seats.

The 4,000-km-long Bharat Jodo Yatra — from 7 September, 2022 to 30 January, 2023 — saw Gandhi walk from Kanyakumari to Srinagar, covering 12 states and 2 Union territories from the country’s southern coast to the Valley. While the drive of Gandhi’s previous yatra was on communal harmony, the Congress has nipped the theme of the upcoming Bharat Nyay Yatra to focus more on “bread and butter” issues with an eye on the upcoming elections. In the 2019 Lok Sabha election campaign, the Congress had promised a minimum income guarantee scheme called NYAY (Nyuntam Aay Yojana).

The Congress party is expecting the Bharat Nyay Yatra to be historic. At the Congress Working Committee meeting last week, Kharge had proposed that Gandhi take out another yatra. Incidentally, several party leaders had credited the party’s victory in the Karnataka assembly elections earlier this year to Gandhi’s first mass outreach yatra. The party, however, was finally defeated by the BJP just months later in Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan and Chhattisgarh. The first two were covered in the first yatra.

Even if Rahul Gandhi walks through each and every street of India, people will not take him seriously because he is already portrayed as an incapable leader by the BJP. Same is the case with INDIA alliance. Just like people have shown the way out in recent assembly elections people will throw them out during the upcoming parliament election. Rahul Gandhi is a burden for the Congress and INDI alliance.

For Congress this yatra is another hop. This will be good for giving strength and courage to Congress and all INDIA Front parties. How many votes this march grabs for congress is interesting to see ahead.

Congress to kick-start the election campaign with ‘Bharat Nyay Yatra’ from January 14 from Manipur-Mumbai

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Congress to kick-start the election campaign with 'Bharat Nyay Yatra' from January 14 from Manipur-Mumbai 18

The Congress has announced ‘Bharat Nyay Yatra’ from Manipur in the east to Mumbai in western India, covering 14 states and 85 districts, beginning January 14. The yatra would be led by Rahul Gandhi and other veteran Congress leaders. The yatra will conclude on March 20, covering around 6,200 km. Congress president Mallikarjun Kharge and former party chiefs Sonia Gandhi and Rahul Gandhi will address the rally, according to party leaders.

Congress general secretary Jairam Ramesh said at a press conference, “After the Bharat Jodo Yatra, the Congress will take out a Bharat Nyay Yatra under the leadership of Rahul Gandhi ji,”. The Bharat Nyay Yatra will focus on securing economic, social, and political justice for the people of the country, Ramesh said.

The Congress is all geared up for next year’s Lok Sabha elections with its mega rally ‘Hain Tayyar Hum’ to be held in Maharashtra’s Nagpur city on Thursday, the party’s 139th foundation day.

“It will be a historic moment for the people of the country,” Maharashtra Congress chief Nana Patole said on Wednesday, addressing a press conference at the venue of the event.

The mega event assumes significance as it will be held in Nagpur, where the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh’s (RSS) headquarters and ‘Deekshabhoomi’, the historic place where Dr B R Ambedkar embraced Buddhism, are located.