Chandigarh:
Aam Aadmi Party National Media In-Charge Anurag Dhanda stated today that the BJP is set to receive a major blow in the upcoming assembly elections across five states. He remarked that the citizens of the country are deeply disillusioned by the BJP government’s anti-people policies and will deliver a decisive response at the polls. Dhanda announced that while AAP will directly challenge the BJP by contesting elections in Assam and Kerala, it will support Mamata Banerjee and the Trinamool Congress in West Bengal to ensure the BJP’s defeat. He emphasized that every AAP worker will fight firmly against the BJP’s flawed policies.
Anurag Dhanda further highlighted that due to the BJP government’s mismanagement, the entire country is currently grappling with a severe LPG crisis. Long queues have formed outside gas agencies in several states, causing immense hardship for common citizens. Women, the elderly, and working professionals are being forced to wait for hours in line.
Anurag Dhanda said that the situation has deteriorated to the point where people are forced to abandon their livelihoods just to secure a gas cylinder. In many places, citizens are having to carry cylinders home on their own shoulders. According to Dhanda, this situation clearly demonstrates that the BJP government has completely failed in its administrative duties and remains insensitive to the struggles of ordinary citizens.
The BJP government has prioritized the politics of making people stand in queues over providing facilities. First, it was bank queues during demonetization, then queues for rations, and now the public must wait hours for gas cylinders. Life for the common man has become increasingly difficult under BJP rule,” Dhanda stated.
Anurag Dhanda concluded by asserting that the Aam Aadmi Party stands firmly with the people and will continue to fight against the BJP’s anti-people policies. He expressed confidence that in the upcoming elections, voters will teach the BJP a lesson and strengthen the politics of public interest.













