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‘Vishakanya’, ‘Nalayak Beta’: Plummeting public discourse during polls

Barbs like ‘venomous snake’, ‘Vishakanya’ and ‘Nalayak Beta’ struck discordant notes as a plummeting level of campaign discourse marked electioneering in Karnataka that votes on Wednesday. Instances of leaders using intemperate and abusive language without exercising caution and restraint vitiated the campaign and election atmosphere, political observers note. The high decibel campaign for polls to […]

Barbs like ‘venomous snake’, ‘Vishakanya’ and ‘Nalayak Beta’ struck discordant notes as a plummeting level of campaign discourse marked electioneering in Karnataka that votes on Wednesday. Instances of leaders using intemperate and abusive language without exercising caution and restraint vitiated the campaign and election atmosphere, political observers note.
The high decibel campaign for polls to the 224-member Assembly ended on Monday in the state, which is witnessing a triangular contest between the ruling BJP, the Congress and Janata Dal (S), headed by former Prime Minister H D Deve Gowda. On campaign trail, AICC President M Mallikarjun Kharge made the “venomous snake” remark against Prime Minister Narendra Modi.Addressing a public meeting at Ron in Gadag district on 27 April, Kharge said: “Don’t make a mistake. Modi is like a venomous snake…” Kharge, who hails from Karnataka, came under sharp attack by the BJP, and Modi too raised this issue during his election rallies. Kharge later clarified that his comment was not against the Prime Minister per se but the BJP. An angry counter came from BJP’s Vijayapura candidate Basanagouda Patil Yatnal who likened former Congress president Sonia Gandhi to ‘Vishakanya’. Days later, Kharge’s son Priyank Kharge, who is contesting the Assembly elections from Chittapur in Kalaburagi constituency, called Modi a ‘Nalayak Beta’ over “confusion” with regard to the internal reservations for the Scheduled Castes, especially nomadic Lambani tribes.
Corruption issues also dominated dominated campaigning as the BJP and the Congress engaged in a fierce fight. As the Congress continued to attack the the ruling BJP, calling it a “40 percent commission government”, the Prime Minister hit out back at the grand old party pointing to the 85 percent corruption when Rajiv Gandhi was the Prime Minister.

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