“Just want to tell BJP, they can ask us 50, not five questions, but at least they should come up with new set of questions. The same questions have been repeatedly asked and been answered. It clearly shows that panic has set in the BJP,” Yogendra Yadav tweeted on Thursday.
This reaction comes in the wake of BJP’s idea of putting forth five questions to AAP Convenor Arvind Kejriwal on Thursday.
The saffron party is trying to evade a debate and even running away from coming up with a manifesto before the February 7 election. Their only pre-occupation is to level frivolous charges against Kejriwal in an attempt to portray him in poor light in front of voters. Yadav further tweeted: “The so-called five questions are a reflection of the panic that has crept in the BJP. They should at least come up with some new ones now.”
Meanwhile, he even asked the BJP to frame a new set of questions for Kejriwal, without a repetition of the earlier ones. Not amused by this proposal of placing five questions, several AAP leaders have said in unison that the saffron party is suffering from severe frustration.
Earlier on Thursday, the BJP announced that it will not present any manifesto for the forthcoming Delhi polls but will instead come up with a ‘vision document’. Delhi goes to polls on February 7, with counting of votes set to take place on February 10. Yadav said he was amazed that the BJP had same “old and boring” set of questions and was “making a mountain out of a mole hill”.
Earlier, BJP leader Rajiv Pratap Rudy said his party would ask Kejriwal five questions every day till February 5, starting with the AAP’s decision to join hands with the Congress to form the government in Delhi. “Same questions have repeatedly been asked and we have already answered them,” Yadav said, adding that it clearly shows that “panic has set in the BJP”.
This reaction comes in the wake of BJP’s idea of putting forth five questions to AAP Convenor Arvind Kejriwal on Thursday.
The saffron party is trying to evade a debate and even running away from coming up with a manifesto before the February 7 election. Their only pre-occupation is to level frivolous charges against Kejriwal in an attempt to portray him in poor light in front of voters. Yadav further tweeted: “The so-called five questions are a reflection of the panic that has crept in the BJP. They should at least come up with some new ones now.”
Meanwhile, he even asked the BJP to frame a new set of questions for Kejriwal, without a repetition of the earlier ones. Not amused by this proposal of placing five questions, several AAP leaders have said in unison that the saffron party is suffering from severe frustration.
Earlier on Thursday, the BJP announced that it will not present any manifesto for the forthcoming Delhi polls but will instead come up with a ‘vision document’. Delhi goes to polls on February 7, with counting of votes set to take place on February 10. Yadav said he was amazed that the BJP had same “old and boring” set of questions and was “making a mountain out of a mole hill”.
Earlier, BJP leader Rajiv Pratap Rudy said his party would ask Kejriwal five questions every day till February 5, starting with the AAP’s decision to join hands with the Congress to form the government in Delhi. “Same questions have repeatedly been asked and we have already answered them,” Yadav said, adding that it clearly shows that “panic has set in the BJP”.