Opposition’s Test
The latest gathering of opposition parties in New Delhi offered a reminder that the central challenge before India's non-BJP political forces is no longer one of arithmetic. It is one of credibility.
The latest gathering of opposition parties in New Delhi offered a reminder that the central challenge before India's non-BJP political forces is no longer one of arithmetic. It is one of credibility.
A political war of words erupted on Wednesday as the Congress sought to challenge the narrative surrounding Prime Minister Narendra Modi becoming India's longest-serving Prime Minister in consecutive terms.
"The Election Commission has heard our case today, and now we are waiting. We are in our fight," Natarajan told reporters in Delhi.
After meeting Election Commission officials, Meenakshi Natarajan said the Congress would continue its challenge through constitutional channels while seeking reversal of her rejected Rajya Sabha nomination.
With Rajya Sabha polling days away, the Congress has mounted a legal and political challenge against the rejection of Meenakshi Natarajan's nomination papers in Madhya Pradesh.
In the Opposition’s Maha Vikas Aghadi, the Congress was leading in 32 local bodies, followed by NCP–SCP with nine and Shiv Sena (UBT) with eight.
He also claimed that the Congress neglected the development of Northeast during its rule.
In this context, the Congress general secretary cited a mention in the US National Defence Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2026, which calls for a joint assessment between the US and India on these rules.
Addressing a state-level women's convention, Mahila Sammelan, at Pachgaon in Dholpur district on Friday, Sharma said, "The erstwhile Congress government did not allot any development work or project to this district."
Chief minister A Revanth Reddy claimed that his party had performed exceedingly well in the rural polls and assembly constituency-wise, this result translates to winning 87 out of the 94 constituencies where elections were held.