Naidu unreliable and worse than Narakasura, don't fall prey to hollow promises: Jagan
VIJAYAWADA: Stating that Telugu Desam president Chandrababu Naidu is unreliable and worse than Narakasura, Chief Minister Jagan Mohnan Reddy has called upon the people not to believe him and fall prey to his hollow promises.
Addressing a public meeting at Venkatapalem in Amaravati on Friday, the chief minister said, “Chandrababu remembers the poor at election time and goes on making false promises to hoodwink them.”
The CM stated, “Not even a cent of land was given to the poor during the Telugu Desam rule. Naidu threw the 600-page TD election manifesto into the dustbin after coming to power with false promises. Chandrababu cheated all sections of the society including the unemployed, women and farmers.”
“Naidu begins making empty promises as the election time draws nearer. My Government worked hard even during the Covid-19 pandemic to acquire land for allotment of house sites to the poor, treating the YSRCP election manifesto as sacred as Bhagavad Gita, Quran and the Bible unlike Naidu who never cared for the poor,” he added.
Jagan Reddy said Naidu was trying to create obstacles even after the apex court gave to for the poor in the R-5 zone in Amaravati.
He said, “Naidu failed to implement the welfare programmes which the YSRC government is implementing now, though the budget is less now, percentage wise. Naidu only implemented the policy of plunder, stash and devour while his foster son (Pawan Kalyan) and a section of the media silently supported him.”
Jagan Reddy said the government has been fighting a class war unleashed against it by the TD, which was against the poor. ”You should not fall prey to the evil designs of the TD and the gang of thieves,” he appealed to them.
He reiterated that the government spent more than Rs 3 lakh crore through DBT and non-DBT welfare schemes in the last four years.
CM Jagan said, “If you feel you have benefitted through the welfare schemes, stand by the YSRC and help us win the next elections to continue the good work we do now for the future too.”