Sangram Patil’s apology before...
- dhadakkamgarunion0
- 2 hours ago
- 3 min read
🖋️ *From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane*
Sangram Patil’s apology before the Bombay High Court exposes the fragility of his position and the contradictions of Congress’s silent support. His statement admits that his writings were baseless, without evidence, and driven by error—yet the damage was already done, targeting India and its leaders while enjoying British citizenship. The plea for mercy, citing family abroad and loss of livelihood, reflects desperation more than accountability. What is striking is the absence of Congress leaders or their allies who once amplified his voice; none came forward when he needed help. Even Adv. Yashomati Thakur’s tweets could not substitute real support. This episode underlines how political patronage evaporates when legal scrutiny begins, leaving the individual isolated. In the end, truth and responsibility matter more than partisan cover.
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🖋️ *From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane*
Mamata Banerjee’s refusal to resign after the Bengal Assembly’s term expiry is less defiance than political theatre. By clinging to office when the mandate has lapsed, she reduces her stance to symbolism without substance. The Election Commission’s notification ensures a new Assembly is in place, and the Governor will naturally invite the BJP, now the largest party, to form government. This marks an unprecedented moment in Indian democracy—never before has a Chief Minister without majority resisted the inevitable. If the Centre responds with a firm hand, Mamata risks losing even the residual sympathy she commands. Her strategy may project defiance, but in reality it underscores the erosion of her authority. The stage is set for Bengal’s power shift, and Mamata’s theatrics cannot alter the constitutional script.
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🖋️ *From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane*
The Kesavnagar–Kharadi bridge has become Pune’s “Taj Mahal”—a project promised a decade ago, still dragging on in 2026. Builders sold flats at inflated prices, luring buyers with false assurances that the bridge would be ready in a year. Politicians and officials wasted years on paperwork, while traffic worsened daily. Even Deputy CM Ajit Pawar’s deadline threats failed; the bridge stands incomplete, with connecting roads missing. Citizens now demand that if BJP’s governance style means tolls, then let there be tolls—but finish the bridge. Commuters lose an hour daily in jams, while encroachments remain untouched. The frustration is boiling over, and only a mass protest seems capable of forcing completion. Pune deserves relief, not endless delays dressed up as development.
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🖋️ *From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane*
Suvendu Adhikari has emerged as Bengal’s “man of the match,” reshaping the state’s political narrative. BJP’s mission to honor Syama Prasad Mookerjee by winning Bengal needed a strong face against Mamata Banerjee, and Suvendu delivered. His victory in Nandigram was the turning point, proving he could challenge Mamata head-on. Later, defeating her again in Bhabanipur cemented his stature as BJP’s foremost leader in Bengal. Unlike defectors, Suvendu stayed firm, exposing TMC’s misuse of police and vote-bank politics while connecting with ordinary Bengalis frustrated by poverty and violence. Backed by the BJP’s election machinery and central leadership, he became the rallying point for Hindutva and governance. Today, Suvendu is no longer Mamata’s second-in-command but Bengal’s primary leader, carrying the lion’s share of credit for BJP’s historic triumph.
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🖋️ *From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane*
Tamil Nadu politics has slipped into a strange deadlock. TVK, led by Joseph Vijay, won 107 seats but needs 118 for majority. Congress abandoned DMK to join TVK, adding 5 MLAs, yet the tally stands at 112—still short. CPI and CPM refused support, leaving only PMK’s 4 seats, which would raise the count to 116, not enough. AIADMK has also declined backing, pushing TVK into a hung position. Congress too faces a trap: with DMK alienated and AIADMK aligned with BJP, its 5 seats mean little if TVK fails to form government. In chasing quick gains, Congress risks losing its old ally without securing power. This miscalculation reflects Rahul Gandhi’s trademark political gamble—one that may leave his party stranded in Tamil Nadu’s fractured landscape.
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