Wednesday , December 25 2024

Sukhu should worry about Hamirpur instead of Mandi: Jairam Thakur

Mandi, May 10 (HS). Former Chief Minister Jairam Thakur, while giving a strong reaction to the language style used by the Chief Minister and his associate leaders in the nomination rally of the Congress candidate, said that the kind of language used by the Congress leaders will be responded to very soon. Addressing the media after a program of BJYM in Mandi, he said that the way efforts are being made to target me by coming to Mandi today, it seems that the leaders of the Congress party are upset after seeing their defeat. He is such a Chief Minister whose three MLAs from his district stood up in protest within a year when he was harassed.

He said that Chief Minister Sukhwinder Sukhu should first see how much land is left under you. He is the first Chief Minister whose government's popularity graph had fallen in the first six months itself. Now there is no such thing as government left. The market has been moving ahead with self-respect. Whenever Congress leaders come to the market and abuse, it is the public that knows how to respond to them. The public is going to answer for the discrimination that the Sukhu government has done to Mandi in these 15 months.

Jai Ram said that the Congress candidates are talking about a big vision but it would have been better if this family, which has represented Mandi eight times, would have discussed it at home first. In front of you, decisions were taken in the cabinet to stop the development of the market and you remained silent. 12 bridges in Mandi and Kullu were damaged by rain but despite being the PWD minister, you did not restore even a single bridge. Is this your vision? We who are in the opposition have the right to ask questions. You are in power and your family represented Mandi eight times. Why were you not able to implement that vision for so many years while your father has been the Chief Minister six times. The truth is that this royal family remembers the market only during elections.