MNS leader Raj Thackeray, once considered close to Narendra Modi, on Thursday said the Gujarat Chief Minister should have resigned the day he was nominated BJP’s prime ministerial candidate, a suggestion immediately rejected by the saffron party.
Thackeray also criticised Modi for his ‘excessive’ focus on Gujarat and said instead of talking about his achievements there he should think about the whole country.
“The day Narendra Modi was nominated BJP’s prime ministerial candidate, he should have quit as chief minister. The prime minister is of the entire country and not of a state,” he told reporters at Nashik.
The MNS leader said though he appreciated Modi’s work in his state, BJP’s prime ministerial contender was always thinking about Gujarati people.
“Even when he is in Mumbai, he thinks about Gujarati people, talks about honouring Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel, but is not seen talking about Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj, who was also great,” he said.
Thackeray said he has not yet decided about supporting Modi in his bid to become prime minister.
Thackeray’s remark drew a sharp response from BJP, an ally of his estranged cousin Uddhav Thackeray’s Shiv Sena, with its Maharashtra unit chief Devendra Fadnavis saying Modi is competent enough to decide when to quit.
“Modi is performing his duties as chief minister with efficiency. So there is no question of his resigning from his post,” he said in Mumbai.
“Modi doesn’t speak about Gujarat…he speaks about development, growth, inclusivity, social sector, demographic advantage, jobs…he speaks about India. If Mr Thackeray had listened to Mr Modi’s speeches, he would never give such a reaction,” Fadnavis said.
He said since Modi had dwarfed his rivals, they were repeatedly attacking him.
Asked about the prospects of Aam Aadmi Party, which made a stunning debut in Delhi assembly polls, in Maharashtra, the MNS leader said his party was still its ‘Baap’ in the state.
“There is no need of AAP, we the Baap are here. Today, you are all talking about AAP, but I have been saying for the last many years that vote me to power in Maharashtra because things cannot change otherwise. I would fix Maharashtra’s problems,” he said.
Anjali Damania, Maharashtra convenor of the fledgling AAP, while reacting to Thackeray’s comment on her party said, “Who is the Baap, only elections will decide. I think everyone should mind his own business, look at how to grow your party rather than commenting on others.”


Maharashtra BJP has appointed a committee to look into various ‘unsavoury’ incidents involving its local leaders in recent past.
Political violence was putting more burden on the police machinery in Maharashtra, state Home Minister R R Patil said here on Wednesday evening.
Mumbai electricity consumers with monthly consumption up to 500 units may have to wait 50% cut in their tariff alike their counterparts in Delhi. However, preliminary estimates made internally by power distribution companies Tata Power and Reliance Infrastructure, the BrihanMumbai ElectricSupply and Transport (BEST) and the state energy department show that tariff reduction for the consumer categories of 0-100 units, 101-300 units and 301-500 unit will cost the distribution companies worth nearly Rs 300 crore.
Mumbai has emerged as the safest city to drive and is also voted as the city with most disciplined traffic, says a road safety survey on drivers conducted in key cities.
Aam Aadmi Party students wing on Thursday held protest outside the Maharashtra Raj Bhavan to protest the suspension of Mumbai University professor Neeraj Hatekar. The AAP protestors were detained up by police and prohibitory orders under Section 144 have been imposed in the area.
The Court Bombay High Court today asked Maharashtra Government to file a report by February 6 on the existing vacancies in the police force as on December 31 last year and inform what steps were taken by the state to fill up the posts in the past two years.
Alleging that there has been an enormous cost escalation in the Mumbai Metro Rail project, BJP today demanded that Maharashtra government should conduct a special audit to find out the `real cost’. “There has been a cost escalation of upto 300 percent in the Mumbai Metro Rail, which is a public-private-partnership project. I have written to the chief secretary J S Saharia and demanded a special CAG audit,” BJP leader and former MP Kirit Somaiya said here.