BJP denigrating authority and power of poll panel: Cong

Press Trust of India  |  New Delhi 

The today attacked the for denigrating the authority of the Commission and alleged that "past practices, conventions and precedents" were being set aside to help the ruling party in

spokesperson Abhishek Singhvi accused the of pressure tactics to convert the Commission to "Omission" and said the party wanted to woo the people of with some last-minute sops.


The party also demanded that the polls be announced immediately and the imposed.

"In a last-ditch effort to save itself from the thrashing which it will receive from the hands of the people of in the forthcoming elections, the has resorted to shameless pressure tactics on the EC and has most blatantly denigrated the authority and power of the Commission," he told reporters.

He alleged that a "drowning man is desperately clutching at straws" to announce populist sops on October 16, when Prime Minister Narendra Modi is slated to visit his home state.

"We would like to strongly point that is trying its best to influence the functioning of the Commission. Just like it belittled the authority of the RBI, judiciary, and other important institutions, it is trying to pressurize the EC."

The Commission "it seems has handed a rope to the to somehow climb the cliff, at a time when the is down and out and is looking to somehow lure the electorate with sops", Singhvi said in a statement.

The statement added that "past practices, conventions and precedents are being set aside to help the BJP".

The state government and the Ahmedabad Municipal Corporation (AMC) made some big announcements for various sections a few hours before the Commission announced dates for the Himachal Pradesh election, he said.

"This is bribery. This is collective or attempted bribery."

Singhvi also took a dig at the prime minister, asking why simultaneous elections were not declared for Himachal and when he had been talking about holding simultaneous polls for all states across the country.

The leader said the government declared a slew of sops aimed at wooing agitating Patidars, the Valmiki community, lakhs of government employees and the powerful builder lobby and asked, "Why was it in such a hurry?"

He also alleged that the BJP-ruled AMC advanced its standing committee meeting by an hour and a half to clear proposals worth Rs 530 crore in just 10 minutes and asked why it did so.

The anomaly of announcing elections in Himachal Pradesh first and not announcing the elections in casts a serious shadow of suspicion on the workings of the Commission, he said, accusing the of being the "biggest culprit to break this time tested convention".

"The frenzied, desperate and last minute attempt by the to force this change so as to enable Prime Minister Narendra Modi announce various sops like a 'fake' Santa Claus in on October 16, speaks volumes about how the is staring at a complete decimation in Gujarat," he said.

Both states have held elections together since 1998 (except in 2002-03, due to riots in Gujarat), Singhvi said, wondering why the time for enforcement of model code of conduct was reduced this time.

He also cited examples in the past when elections to various states were announced together.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, October 13 2017. 19:02 IST