calender_icon.png 30 October, 2025 | 2:56 AM

Don't get Duped Twice: KTR

30-10-2025 12:00:00 AM

metro india news  I hyderabad

Urging voters to back BRS's 'Car' symbol against the 'Bulldozer' regime, Bharat Rashtra Samithi Working President K.T. Rama Rao warned against falling for renewed deceptions at the Munnuru Kapu Athmeeya Sammelanam in Telangana Bhavan. "Two years ago, people believed these lies and got cheated—don't repeat it," KTR cautioned, framing the looming Jubilee Hills by-election as a reckoning for the Congress government's failures.

KTR declared governance in Telangana has completely collapsed, leaving no section of society content. He lambasted the administration's indifferent ministers, who roam Jubilee Hills like street leaders while ignoring core duties. Farmers bear the brunt: no procurement system for paddy or cotton, no bonuses, investment aid, seeds, or fertilizers—leading to desperate queues and suicides. 

The unemployed youth face betrayal too. KTR accused Chief Minister A. Revanth Reddy of promising two lakh jobs but delivering under 7,000. "They make false, contradictory claims," he sneered. Women are equally duped: scooties for the young, ₹2,500 monthly stipends, and one tola of gold for brides remain unfulfilled. Free bus travel? A ruse, with costs clawed back from men. 

The vaunted "Indiramma Rajyam" has built zero new homes yet demolished thousands of the poor's, with officials cowering before the wealthy but bulldozing the vulnerable.

On Backward Classes (BCs), KTR credited former CM K. Chandrashekar Rao (KCR) for empowering communities like Munnuru Kapus with respect. Congress's 42% reservation pledge is a sham, he charged, requiring Parliamentary amendment—ignored despite warnings. Where's the promised ₹20,000 crore yearly (₹1 lakh crore over five years) for BC welfare? "Fulfill your pre-poll vows," KTR demanded.

In a cheeky twist, KTR advised: "If Congress offers ₹2,000, take it—but vote BRS and demand the rest of the ₹58,000!" He flagged 12,000–13,000 bogus votes allegedly engineered by the ruling party, urging booth vigilance. "This poll pits the Car against the Bulldozer—choose wisely to teach them a lesson," he stressed, igniting calls for course correction.