top of page

🖋️ From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane

  • dhadakkamgarunion0
  • Dec 23, 2025
  • 3 min read

🖋️ From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane

A Molehill Painted as a Mountain

In Maharashtra’s political theatre, the Vanchit Bahujan Aghadi has declared its latest municipal showing as nothing short of historic. Seventy councillors across scattered councils are being paraded as if the state has witnessed a revolution. Speeches brim with triumph, banners scream of “unprecedented success,” and meetings with Congress leaders are spun as proof of indispensability. Yet, beneath the drumbeats lies a quieter truth: this is a modest gain, inflated into a grand narrative. The party’s strategists seem eager to convince the public that without them, no anti-BJP front can survive. It is classic political satire in motion—when a molehill is painted as a mountain, the spectacle matters more than the substance. Maharashtra’s voters, however, will decide whether this performance deserves applause or polite laughter.

🔽

🖋️ From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane,  

Honoring Sacrifice Amid Victory

In Thiruvananthapuram, the BJP’s resounding success in the municipal polls was marked not by celebratory banners of newly elected councillors, but by portraits of those who gave their lives for the cause of Hindutva over the past 45 years. This symbolic gesture carried profound meaning. In Kerala, where ideological resistance has long made the path difficult for RSS and allied organizations, acknowledging the sacrifices of fallen workers is both a tribute and a reminder of the struggle. By placing these images in the heart of the capital, the party chose to honor memory over mere triumph, linking present gains to past endurance. It is a rare moment in politics where victory bows before sacrifice, and gratitude becomes the true banner of celebration.

🔽

🖋️ From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane

Maharashtra’s Midterm Mandate

The results of the 288 municipal councils have reaffirmed the political momentum of the Mahayuti alliance. With BJP alone doubling its strength from 1,600 to 3,325 councillors, and the alliance securing 221 of 288 councils, the verdict mirrors the 2024 assembly mandate. Voters appear to have endorsed not just party symbols but the governance style of Devendra Fadnavis’s government—marked by clarity of vision, decisiveness, and a reputation for clean leadership. The emphasis on infrastructure, welfare, and administrative grip has resonated more strongly than emotional appeals. This midterm election thus serves as a report card, and the people have rewarded performance over rhetoric. Maharashtra’s electorate has once again signaled that results, not slogans, will shape their choices. Congratulations to the victorious candidates and gratitude to the voters.

🔽

🖋️ From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane

Page 3 Shadows and the Oldest Currency

Bollywood’s hidden files could make Epstein look tame. Madhur Bhandarkar’s Chandni Bar once dared to expose the murky lives of politicians, entrepreneurs, actors, and the mafia—and he was quietly boycotted for it. Even today, whispers surround mysterious farmhouses, five-star hotel soirées dripping in gold, and journalists silenced under pressure. The tragic deaths of Divya Bharti, Jiah Khan, and Disha Patani echo with eerie similarities: suspicious falls, unanswered questions, and powerful names lurking in the background. In this world, truth is buried under mountains of money and influence. The most damning irony? Election tickets are still bought with the world’s oldest currency—skin. Bollywood’s glittering Page 3 masks a darker reality where glamour and power collide, leaving behind unanswered mysteries and a trail of broken lives.

🔽

🖋️ From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane

The Fall of a Once-Formidable Force

The recent municipal election results have delivered a harsh reality check to Shiv Sena (Ubtacha) and its allies. Despite their fiery rhetoric and sharp barbs at rivals during their 32 months in power, the party now finds itself facing a humiliating defeat. Not a single mayoral victory in ten councils, while local development fronts outperformed them, signals a deep erosion of grassroots support. Sanjay Raut’s silence on his own party’s collapse, coupled with his jibes at BJP’s setbacks in Chandrapur, only underscores the irony. Leaders who once thrived on taunts against Fadnavis, Shinde, and the BJP now stand exposed to the same ridicule. Politics, after all, is cyclical: those who dish out biting commentary must be prepared to swallow it when fortunes reverse. The tide has turned, and accountability is unavoidable.

🔽






 
 
 

Comments


  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn

Copyright © 2020 Abhijeet Rane

  • What's App
  • Telegram
bottom of page