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2019 Lok Sabha elections: 8 constituencies to watch out for as big names go head to head

With the Lok Sabha elections hardly a week away, political parties are all prepped to fight the big battle which will decide the fate of the country as well as of the political parties for the next five years. Like every election season, this one also witnessed some of the big names of politics crossing over from to other political parties in search of a better future. Parties have pitched their best names for the first phase of elections covering 91 constituencies.

Here is a list of the BJP candidates who would be battling big political names like Sonia Gandhi, Akhilesh Yadav and Mulayam Singh.

PM Narendra Modi v Chandrashekhar ‘Ravan’ (Varanasi)

Prime Narendra Modi will be contesting from the Varanasi seat from where he is the sitting MP. No big political party has fielded a candidate from the Varanasi seat yet to contest against Modi. Two other candidates who are fighting from Varanasi are Bhim Army Chief Chandrashekhar ‘Ravan‘ and former BSP soldier Tej Bahadur Yadav.

Dinesh Pratap Singh v Sonia Gandhi (Rae Bareli)

Dinesh Pratap Singh who earlier a member of Congress Party will be contesting against Sonia Gandhi from Rae Bareli seat. Singh who joined BJP in 2018 has been a two time MLC while Sonia Gandhi has been representing the Rae Bareli seat since 2004.

Dinesh Lal Yadav aka Nirhua v Akhilesh Yadav (Azamgarh)

A very successful Bhojpuri singer, actor and producer Dinesh Lal Yadav who is popularly known as Nirhua, is fighting on a BJP ticket against Samajwadi Party (SP) President and former Chief Minister of Uttar Pradesh Akhilesh Yadav. Nirhua will be started his political career with this Lok Sabha election.

Prem Singh Shakya v Mulayam Singh Yadav (Mainpuri)
BJP  has fielded Prem Singh Shakya against SP patriarch Mulayam Singh Yadav. Shakya who has been with the BJP for about 16 years, will be fighting against Mulayam Singh Yadav from the latter’s stronghold Mainpuri.
Dr Chandra Sen Jadon v Shivpal Singh Yadav (Firozabad)
Dr Chandra Sen Jadon is contesting on BJP ticket from Firozabad seat against  Mulayam Singh’s brother and former SP leader Shivpal Singh Yadav who has left the SP to form Pragatisheel Samajwadi Party-Lohia. Dr Jadon who is a private practitioner will also be fighting against Ramgopal Yadav’s son Akshya Yadav who is contesting from the same seat.
Thushar Vellapally v Rahul Gandhi (Wayanad)
Bharatiya Dharma Jana Sena (BDJS) President Thushar Vellapally will be contesting on the NDA against Congress President Rahul Gandhi from Wayanad constituency in Kerala. Vellapally also has the LDF candidate P Suneer contesting from the same seat.
Smriti Irani v Rahul Gandhi (Amethi)
Union Minister Smriti Irani will be fighting against the Gandhi scion who has been Amethi for the last fifteen years. This times Rahul Gandhi has filed the nomination from Wayanad apart from his traditional stronghold Amethi.
Amit Shah v C J Chavda (Gandhinagar)
BJP National President will be contesting from the Gandhinagar constituency in the upcoming Lok Sabha elections. The seat is currently represented by senior BJP leader Lal Krishna Advani. Congress has fielded C J Chavda from the Gandhinagar constituency against Shah. Chavda currently represents the Assembly seat of Gandhinagar North.

Fact Check: Congress and its IT cell head use images from UPA era to attack PM Modi

Congress and all its leaders have developed a track record of using half-truths and whole lies to attack the BJP, much like the president of her party, Rahul Gandhi. Its  IT cell head Divya Spandana is no exception. Earlier this year, she had spread half-truths about the Vande Bharat Express to discredit the government and insensitively dragged the Pulwama Attack into it in the process.

Congress had recently shared a video where they claimed that PM Narendra Modi has ruined India in the last 5 years. This video was created as an apparent attempt to mock a video on the achievements of PM Modi that had gone viral on social media.


However, it seems, the video is littered with images from the Congress era which are now being used to target the NDA government. In the video, an image of a malnourished child appears on the screen which seems to be an image from 2012.

Here is a screenshot from a Daily Mail report from October 2012 which carries the same image.

Another image that appears in the Congress propaganda video is of a river clogged with plastic garbage.

Here is the result that emerges when one searches for the image on Google:

Source: @pokershash

The Google results clearly show that image is from 2012. Thus, we see that at least some images used in the video depict how things were under the UPA government and not the NDA.

Spandana had also shared ‘news’ from a dubious website ‘IndiaScoops’ to prove that the Rafale deal was a scam. She had also shared an edited image of a newspaper front-page to attack the BJP. In August 2017, she had lied about Amit Shah’s speech.

Congress’ official handle too, had been often found to be spreading fake news and misinformation.

RLD chief Ajit Singh’s racist comment, says we could get a ‘chowkidar’ from Nepal

Rashtriya Lok Dal chief and former Prime Minister Chaudhary Charan Singh’s son Ajit Singh made a racist jibe against the Nepalese community today.

“If we need a chowkidar, we will get it from Nepal, we need a PM,” he said adding that if PM Modi would have had his way, he would have claimed having killed Ravan after returning from Sri Lanka.

Last month, AAP MLA Alka Lamba had also made such racist slur by saying that, “Kripya iss baar Pradhan Mantri chuniyega, Chowkidar to Nepal se bhi mangwa sakte hai.” However, after drawing flak for her racist comment, she has now deleted her tweet.

Similar comments were also tweeted by Congress leader and a minister in Punjab government, Navjot Singh Sidhu where he said the exact same thing as Lamba.

Being critical of politicians is absolutely fair and healthy in a democracy. However, this outright racism by Opposition leaders to take a dig at the ‘chowkidar’ campaign by PM Modi is insensitive and tone-deaf. Implying that people of Nepal can be only good security guard is among the worst examples of racism.

Racism can be eliminated when legislators and politicians display no-tolerant policy towards it. However, when politicians themselves indulge in such behaviour, it normalises racism and it only gains ground. It is unbecoming of a politician to resort to racism in order to take on his ideological adversary.

Miffed Congress workers in Bihar create ruckus at the party office in Patna over ticket denial

Disillusionment is looming large amongst the Congress workers in Bihar as they create a ruckus at the Congress party office in Patna on the denial of the Lok Sabha seat to the former MP Nikhil Kumar from the Aurangabad constituency. The Congress alliance in Bihar has chosen to field Hindustani Awam Morcha(Secular)’s Upendra Prasad as its candidate from the said constituency.


As can be seen in the video, Congress workers protesting against the denial of ticket to their former MP Nikhil Kumar are visibly miffed with the party’s decision of relinquishing the seat of Aurangabad to one of the partners of the grand alliance Hindustani Awam Morcha. Disgruntled party members raised their objections and registered their protest against the party’s decision at the Congress party office in Patna.

While on one hand, the BJP has been swift and astute in stitching alliance with the regional parties and smooth distribution of tickets with its alliance partners, the Congress has been ostensibly clumsy in forming alliances and distributing tickets among its alliance partners.

In Maharashtra, former Leader of Opposition Radhakrishna Patil’s son Sujay Vikhe Patil joined BJP because he was denied Ahmednagar Lok Sabha seat while being in the UPA alliance. Radhakrishna Patil also declared his displeasure over the Congress-NCP alliance and claimed that he won’t campaign for them. Even former CM Ashok Chavan was heard saying in a tape that he was frustrated with the Congress leadership and was contemplating of resigning.

It is notable here that Congress and RJD had tussled for weeks before deciding on seat sharing for the Lok Sabha elections. Finally, Congress had agreed to contest in 9 seats, giving RJD 20, RLSP 5, HAM 3 and VIP 3 seats.

Serious allegations of cash for constituency has also been accused by many Congress leaders. A few days back Ex-AICC secretary Sudhakar Reddy had resigned from Congress alleging that the party is selling Lok Sabha election tickets for crores of rupees.

Shivling placed under a ‘plank’ on sets of Dabangg 3, Salman Khan apologises and calls himself a Shiv Bhakt

Salman Khan found himself embroiled in yet another controversy in Maheshwar (Madhya Pradesh) on the 3rd of the ongoing shoot of his upcoming movie Dabangg 3. A photo of a Shivling being covered by a plank on sets of the movie had gone viral after which the plank was removed and Salman Khan had to come forward and issue a clarification.

A plank was installed on the Shivaling in Maheshwar (Source: Dainik Bhaskar)

Salman is currently shooting for his movie Dabangg 3 in Madhya Pradesh’s Maheshwar. Confronted with the controversy, Salman himself had to come out in the evening to issue a clarification in the matter. Salman said, “The Shivling was covered with a platform so as to protect it. However, it was lifted in the afternoon. I’m myself a big Shiva devotee. A couple of months back CM Kamal Nath asked me to shoot in MP as I hail from Indore. So Maheshwar was selected.”

However, the flagrant disrespect of the much-hallowed Shivling hasn’t gone down well with the BJP leaders. Senior BJP leader Dr Hitesh Vajpayee tweeted on Thursday and said, “Chanting Vande Mataram is considered as a threat to your religion. How could you think of putting up a platform at one of the 12 Jyotirlingas in Omkareshwar-Maheshwar and dance on it?”


In another tweet, Vajapayee continued his attack on the Congress seeking an explanation from MP CM Kamal Nath and Congress leader Digvijaya Singh about the apparent insult meted out to the revered Shivaling and if they approve of such anti-Hindu activities. He also asked if the electoral officer of MP will take cognisance of the act which was meant to provoke a class.

Scores of Muslim League flags seen at Rahul Gandhi’s road show at Wayanad, despite concerns expressed by Congress

Rahul Gandhi filed his candidature today from the Wayanad constituency in Kerala. The Congress party is in alliance with Indian Union Muslim League (IUML) which in turn is tied up with Jammat-e-Islami and Social Democratic Party of India (SDPI), both accused by National Investigation Agency (NIA) of spreading radicalism in Kerala.

A huge number of Muslim league flags were witnessed at Wayanad today at the Congress President’s roadshow. Videos have been circulating on social media where scores of green flags with the Islamic crescent and star were seen.


The official handle of the Congress party on Twitter shared images where the Muslim league flags are clearly visible.


The presence of IUML flags was also confirmed by pictures shared by Times of India on Twitter through its official handle.


The flags are also visible in a video shared by CNN News18.


Images shared by Congress social media team also confirm the presence of the flags.

The presence of the flags in the Nehru-Gandhi Parivar’s road show acquires a special significance as the Congress party had allegedly given strict instructions to its ally, the IUML, not to use the flags as it might harm their political prospects in North India. The CPI(M), too, had claimed that Rahul Gandhi was in the company of extremist Muslims at Wayanad.

IUML’s association with radical Islamist outfits SDPI was also pointed out by CPI(M)  state secretary Kodiyeri Balakrishnan who had said, “Gandhi is contesting as the candidate of Congress-IUML-Jammat-SDPI. Congress should think whether seeking the support of Muslim extremist organizations would benefit Congress at the national level.”

Wayanad is a Muslim majority constituency where they make up 56% of the electorate. Hindus are in minority with only 34%.

‘RG’ received Rs.50 crore between 2004 to 2016 in AgustaWestland Deal: Enforcement Directorate

In a massive development, the Enforcement Directorate has claimed that a person with abbreviations ‘RG’ has received Rs 50 crore between 2004 to 2016 in connection with AgustaWestland deal.

According to a report by India Today, the Enforcement Directorate has made a startling revelation while seeking the custody of accused Sushen Gupta, who was arrested by the ED late on March 25 under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA).

“Sushen Gupta is misguiding the investigation by deliberately giving wrong abbreviations in his diaries wherein abbreviation ‘RG’ find mention in many pages as well as in pen drive data,” stated the ED application according to India Today TV.

“More than 50 crores is shown to have been received by ‘RG’ in between 2004 to 2016 whereas the ‘RG’ identified by Sushen Gupta, that is Rajat Gupta had admitted having cash transaction with Sushen Gupta from 2007 onwards and the same is being quantified,” the ED application stated.

The Enforcement Directorate believes that Sushen Gupta is deliberately not disclosing the real identity of the man, who is referred to as ‘RG’. Sushen Gupta has claimed that the said “RG” is one Rajat Gupta, Director of Ram Hari Ram Jewellers.

Reportedly, the ED has made efforts to authenticate the claims of Sushen Gupta and also questioned Rajat Gupta. However, Rajat Gupta has replied to ED stating that he has no concern with the ‘RG’ abbreviation and it can be only explained by Sushen Gupta.

Earlier, the ED had also dropped a bomb by mentioning that the name of ‘Mrs. Gandhi’ has come during questioning of Christian Michel in connection with the case.

Recently, the Special CBI Court had accepted Rajiv Saxena’s plea to turn approver in the case. In his application under Section 306 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973, Rajiv Saxena had prayed for pardon in the case in exchange of full and true disclosure.

The investigation into the AgustaWestland VVIP chopper scam has seen great developments since middleman Christian Michel was extradited to India from Dubai. Several revelations have come to light, from the names of “Italian Lady”, to “Italian Lady’s son R“, from how Christian Michel was lobbying for the Eurofighter and against the Rafale deal, to how he had unbridled access to the PMO under Congress regimethe CCS and even the investigative agencies.

BBC’s undisguised anti-India bias: From the Leslee Udwin documentary on Nirbhaya to Top Gear and more

I haven’t watched “Delhi Crime” the Netflix movie on Nirbhaya as I haven’t been able to gather enough courage to revisit the repulsive horror of that terrible event that defied the limits of human depravity. But Nandini Bahri-Dhanda’s recent article prompted me to have a relook at what I had written 5 years ago about Nirbhaya’s story as presented by Poorna Jagannathan in the form of a dance drama. This highly acclaimed and soul-shaking presentation was followed by a documentary made by a BBC filmmaker Leslee Udwin, titled “India’s Daughter.” However, the documentary makers had an entirely different agenda for making this film. The BBC and most Western media are well known for seeking out stories in India that look to reinforce existing foreign ideas and biases about the country.

India is too vast in size and culturally too diverse for Europeans to easily comprehend. European understanding of India is only superficial and since it is impossible to compartmentalize a whole subcontinent, stereotyping becomes the only way in which to explain India to the audiences back home. The Orientalists of the Raj developed a theme of profiling of India as a land of magic, miracles and trickery. Indian magicians became popular in the West, so much so that even Western magicians began sporting Indian dresses, complete with turbans etc., and even assumed Indian names. Even the famous novelist Charles Dickens, who was an amateur magician, gave himself an unusual Indian alias, Rhia Rhama Roos, that he used for a charity performance in the Isle of Wight. To the Westerners, the most well-known magic trick is the Indian rope trick, in which an Indian boy apparently climbs up a rope and disappears into thin air. This piece of trickery was nothing but the invention of the mind of a Chicago journalist, John Willkie, who was using a pseudonym, Fred S Ellmore. His fabrication of the tall tale did help the Chicago Daily Tribune sell more copies, but it also resulted in creating an image of India that was far removed from the truth.

Western stereotyping was seen at its worst when the BBC decided to bring its popular TV show, Top Gear to India in 2011. The show is about motorcars, and to my mind, it is one of the vapidest and inane programs on television. However, the BBC thought that audiences would love to see a program showcasing British cars being driven across the subcontinent by the main presenter Jeremy Clarkson, who was reputed to be a personal friend of then British Prime Minister, David Cameron. The program was disguised as a trade mission ostensibly wanting to sell British lawnmowers and other products to the Indian public. Jeremy Clarkson and his team drove around in cities like Mumbai, Jaipur, and Delhi, and then drove up into the Himalayas. Driving old British-made cars like Rolls Royce, Jaguar, and a Mini, the team was constantly complaining about everything Indian. They ridiculed the roads, the climate, the food, and Indian drivers. Clarkson even had a toilet seat fixed on the rear of his Jaguar, explaining that, “everyone who comes here gets the trots”.

A little later, he came up with perhaps the crudest remark you would have heard on television: “In India, you don’t need your penis, because you drink and drink, and it just comes out as sweat.” So culturally insensitive was the program that the Indian High Commission officially complained to the Director General of the BBC, writing, “the programme was replete with cheap jibes, tasteless humour, and lacked cultural sensitivity. This is not what we expect from the BBC.” A British Labour MP of Indian origin, Mr Keith Vaz, was so outraged that he demanded an apology from the BBC, which, of course, never came. Instead, the program was aired in India on the BBC’s international entertainment channel. The Delhi office of the BBC, apprehending some kind of demonstration against it, even took down its sign from the office building. However, nothing untoward happened, and the event passed as another inconsequent milestone in the long history of this ancient land.

The BBC has had numerous run-in with the government and the people in India. In 1970 it was thrown out after a row about a film on Calcutta made by the French director, Louis Malle. In 1975 it preferred to shut down its operations rather than accept censorship during Indira Gandhi’s emergency regime. In 1984, demonstrators protesting against a BBC radio interview with a Sikh separatist attacked the Delhi office. In 1995 a cameraman was killed by a letter bomb in the BBC’s Kashmir office. However, it continues to maintain this Macaulayist attitude of Western cultural superiority and is always on the lookout for stories that can validate this attitude.

Leslee Udwin’s documentary falls into this category of stereotyping a whole culture and tarring an entire nation with the same brush. By focusing the spotlight on India, Udwin has turned the attention away from her own culture and society. She claims to be a victim of the same crime and yet she does not find it more important to understand the minds of the rapists from within her milieu. It is not as if incidents of rape are rare in England. The horrible story of Rotherham was not the first to break out, nor will it be the last. But, English society observes a strict code of censorship, under which “inconvenient truths” are inevitably swept under the carpet. Perhaps the BBC will not pay for a story based on Leslee Udwin’s personal experience but is ready to open its purse if it involves a third world country, especially India. I recall an old BBC news story about the conflict in Kashmir that started in the 1980s. As part of its policy to keep India on the defensive, BBC was trying its best to defame Indian security forces in the valley. Visuals of heavily armed soldiers driving through deserted city streets were shown to reinforce the argument of Indian Armed Forces’ repression of the Kashmiri people. Later, some sharp viewers pointed out that the pictures were taken from the conflict in Chechnya and passed off as those from Kashmir. Did the BBC apologize? I think not. I am sure there must be many more such examples of BBC’s deliberate perfidy against a country for which it has nothing but “scurrilous contempt.”

Nirbhaya’s tragic story has been handled with much more sensitivity by the South African playwright Yael Farber. Her theatrical presentation, “Nirbhaya’s Story” that premiered at the Edinburgh Festival in 2013 is perhaps the most powerful cry for justice for women in this male-dominated patriarchal society. But, as I wrote, the reach of this message is very limited and perhaps does not target the right audiences. In contrast, the BBC has a different motive for making this documentary. Its target audience is not the social milieu from where Mukesh Singh and his partners in the horrible crime have come, but the people of the West who have certain fixed ideas about India’s backwardness and the primitivism of its culture and religion. In India, its target audience is the urban, English speaking, convent educated, so-called liberal individual, whether male or female, who finds everything about vernacular India repugnant and talks eloquently about such concepts as “freedom of expression” and artistic liberty” in perfectly articulated Oxbridge English, while sipping from a glass of single malt Scotch whisky or delicate French wine. When I expressed my frank opinion about this documentary to some of my expatriate Indian friends I was appalled to find that they held similar views about India; that India was a country where rape was commonplace, and that Delhi was the rape capital of the world. I learnt from social media that the original title of Leslee Udwin’s documentary was just that: “Delhi – the Rape Capital of the World.”

This stereotypical profiling of India will continue so long as we have willing accomplices within Indian media. TV Channels like NDTV, hiding under the fig leaves of freedom of expression and artistic liberty, willingly collaborate in such exercises. They keep reinforcing the imperialist argument that India is not capable of governing itself and its society continues to live by primitive moral codes. The reason why there was no protest from the Indian media against Jeremy Clarkson’s obnoxious program is not difficult to find. Our English language mainstream media continues to remain befuddled by its imperialist hangover.

If I made a movie on Rahul Gandhi, most of it will have to be shot in Thailand: Vivek Oberoi

Vivek Oberoi has found himself at the heart of political controversies as his biopic on Prime Minister Modi is set to hit the screens on the 5th of April. He has been doing the rounds of news studios defending his movie as accusations of ‘backdoor funding’ and ‘political propaganda’ are being levelled against him and his movie.

Recently, he visited the NDTV studio to answer questions that have been raised. In an interview to Vishnu Som, he said that it took “all of 30 seconds” for him to say yes to the project.
[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WQyd82YOxWo]

At a certain point, Som asked him whether he would have played the role of Rahul Gandhi. Vivek replied promptly, “If he had done something worth playing the role of, then I would have. I will have to shoot most of the film in Thailand,” he added, taking a sly dig at Rahul Gandhi’s frequent foreign trips. The audience burst into a round of laughter following Vivek’s response.

Vivek was firm in his defense of the timing of the release. Here’s an excerpt of the conversation that transpired:

Som: Why didn't you release the movie in Diwali?
Vivek: It wasn't ready.
Som: The next one.
Vivek: Well, it's ready now.
Som: It would be ready in Diwali as well.
Vivek: Why should I wait? (smiling)
(round of applause and laughter from the audience)


Vivek has consistently maintained throughout the series of interviews that he ‘believes in Narendra Modi’ and that Prime Minister Modi is ‘the need of the hour’. He also maintains that the story of Modi’s rise from being a Chaiwaala as a kid to becoming a World Leader who sees eye to eye with every other global leader is fascinating and inspiring.

The actor has asserted repeatedly that although he has campaigned for the BJP in the past, he is not a member of the party. He admitted to Som that he is a fan of the Prime Minister. The NDTV journalist also inquired if Narendra Modi had reviewed the script of the movie or at least read it. “How does a man who runs the nation have time to these things?” said Vivek. Som quipped, “He works for 18 hours a day, he could have read a script.” “Yes, he works. That’s the keyword. He doesn’t have time for a script,” said Vivek.

The actor has also asked the Opposition whether they are scared of his movie or the Chowkidar’s danda.

Setback for opposition as RLP in Rajasthan and Nishad party in UP join hands with BJP

As the elections are approaching, the BJP has exhibited exceptional dexterity in stitching its alliance with the potential coalition partners, while the Congress has remained lackadaisical in shoring itself up for the upcoming elections. In fact, prominent Congress leaders have deserted the party and joined the opposition ranks, leaving the party in disarray.

Recently, an Ex-AICC secretary resigned from Congress, alleging the party is selling Lok Sabha tickets. Earlier, senior Congress leader Tom Vadakkan had also resigned from the party.

Whereas on the other hand, BJP has been quite aggressive in building alliances with the regional parties. The saffron party has formed an alliance with the Nishad Party in Uttar Pradesh as the chief of Nishad Party, Gorakhpur MP Praveen Nishad has joined the BJP.


It is notable here that Praveen Nishad had won the bypolls in Gorakhpur in 2017 with the support of SP, BSP and other opposition parties. Praveen Nishad was fielded against the BJP candidate as a joint candidate of Nishad Party and SP. The seat was vacant after its five-time MP Yogi Adityanath became the CM of UP.

With elections just days away, the BJP has dealt a heavy blow to Congress in Rajasthan as well by joining hands with Hanuman Beniwal’s RLP. Under this alliance, the BJP will leave one seat of Nagaur from the state’s 25 for the RLP. MLA Beniwal himself will contest the election on this seat.

Union Minister and party’s election in-charge Prakash Javadekar and Beniwal announced this at a joint press conference at the BJP office. Javadekar said that this alliance has been done for the Lok Sabha elections under which the party will offer Nagaur seat to the RLP.

In return, RLP will support the BJP in Rajasthan, along with in the neighbouring states like Haryana, Punjab, Uttar Pradesh, and Delhi, and will help in promoting its candidates. Hanuman Beniwal’s RLP party has an impact on about 9 Lok Sabha seats.

Hanuman Beniwal claimed that Congress while working in power, has worked to rob the country. “To save the nation, we have a coalition with the BJP. Along with Rajasthan, millions of RLP workers in the adjoining states will join Narendra Modi from today,” he said. At the same time, he also said that the nation is paramount for him and he will put all his strength to make Narendra Modi Prime Minister again. Beniwal asserted that the alliance will win all the 25 seats of Rajasthan.

Union Minister Prakash Javadekar said that they are very happy that Hanuman Beniwal’s RLP has agreed to join the alliance. “We have urged Hanuman Beniwal to contest the Nagaur election and promote BJP candidates on other seats.

Before the assembly elections in December last year, Beniwal had formed his party RLP which won three seats. Until a few days ago, he was talking about contesting the elections in conjunction with the Congress party and the Third Front parties. Beniwal was an erstwhile BJP member. In 2008, he became MLA on a BJP ticket, but in 2013, he came to the Assembly as an Independent candidate.