
Let 21-yr olds to contest assembly poll: Revanth
Revanth Reddy
on Wednesday pushed for reducing the minimum age to contest assembly elections from 25 to 21 years. He argued that younger leaders must be given space in lawmaking to drive India's future.
Paying floral tributes to
Rajiv Gandhi
on his 81st birth anniversary at the late PM's statue opposite the secretariat, the CM said the move would carry forward Rajiv's vision of empowering youth.
"It was Rajiv who gave voting right to every Indian above 18. Today, inspired by the same spirit, we want to give every 21-year-old the opportunity to shape lawmaking in legislative assemblies," Revanth said.
You Can Also Check:
Hyderabad AQI
|
Weather in Hyderabad
|
Bank Holidays in Hyderabad
|
Public Holidays in Hyderabad
|
Gold Rates Today in Hyderabad
|
Silver Rates Today in Hyderabad
"Young IAS and IPS officers are successfully steering district administration and law and order responsibilities.
If they can thrive at 21, why not as MLAs?" he said.
He said the minimum age for contesting Lok Sabha elections could remain at 25 for now, the assembly threshold must be lowered to 21 so that 'young guns' can take charge at the state level.
Revanth went a step further, tying the proposal to Congress' national ambitions. "Telangana Assembly will pass a resolution urging the Centre to amend the Constitution once Rahul Gandhi becomes prime minister.
To realise this dream, Rahul should be made PM," he declared, calling on youth to rally behind Congress.
He recalled how Rajiv had ensured 33% reservation for women in local bodies, laying the foundation for future legislation on women's reservation in state assemblies and Parliament. Revanth claimed that despite BJP's reluctance, it was Rajiv's vision that sowed the seeds of women's political empowerment. He also praised Rajiv's partnership with technocrat Sam Pitroda, which spurred the information technology revolution.
"In Hyderabad, the foundation for Hi-Tec City was laid during Nedurumalli Janardhan Reddy's tenure as chief minister of undivided Andhra Pradesh. Today, Hyderabad stands as a hub for IT, data centres, and global capability centres, with Telugu technocrats holding crucial positions in Silicon Valley," he said.
Drawing a parallel between Rajiv's vision and Congress govt's current agenda, Revanth said his govt was working to make Hyderabad compete with the world's best cities through projects like Future City and Musi river rejuvenation. He highlighted recent measures, including resolving long-pending SC categorisation and implementing 42% reservation, as proof of his govt's commitment to inclusive growth.
Stay updated with the latest local news from your
city
on
Times of India
(TOI). Check upcoming
bank holidays
,
public holidays
, and current
gold rates
and
silver prices
in your area.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


India Today
3 minutes ago
- India Today
Endangering American lives: US pauses foreign trucker visas after fatal crash
The United States has immediately paused the issuance of all worker visas for commercial truck drivers, Secretary of State Marco Rubio announced Thursday, citing public safety concerns and the need to protect American jobs.'The increasing number of foreign drivers operating large tractor-trailer trucks on US roads is endangering American lives and undercutting the livelihoods of American truckers,' Rubio said in a post on move follows a series of steps by President Donald Trump's administration to tighten enforcement of rules governing foreign truck drivers. In April, Trump signed an executive order directing authorities to enforce a long-standing requirement that commercial drivers in the US meet English-proficiency standards. That order reversed a 2016 directive that had allowed inspectors to overlook English violations as the sole reason to remove a driver from service. Concerns over the issue escalated this week after a deadly crash in Florida involving a foreign truck driver. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy confirmed the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration has opened an investigation into the incident, which killed three said the driver, Harjinder Singh, an Indian national, did not speak English and lacked legal authorization to work in the United States. Singh was accused of attempting an illegal U-turn through an 'Official Use Only' access point, triggering a collision that killed three occupants of a minivan. He has been charged with three counts of vehicular homicide and has been returned to Florida from California to face warned that the failure to enforce driver qualification standards 'poses serious safety concerns and increases the likelihood of crashes.'- EndsTune InMust Watch


India.com
3 minutes ago
- India.com
Why Chinese Media Say India Has Now Realised The Need For Friendship With Beijing
New Delhi: China's state-run press has placed unusual focus on Foreign Minister Wang Yi's recent visit to New Delhi. For Beijing's news outlets, the trip signalled a shift in India's strategic posture at a time when U.S. tariffs are beginning to bite. During his two-day stay, Wang Yi held wide-ranging talks with Indian National Security Adviser Ajit Doval on the border situation. He also met External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar and Prime Minister Narendra Modi. Reports in Chinese media framed the visit as part of India's recalibration, suggesting that stronger ties with Beijing would benefit the Global South (a grouping of developing nations across Asia, Africa and Latin America). Add Zee News as a Preferred Source The Chinese foreign ministry later confirmed that the two sides agreed to restart regular dialogue mechanisms, expand cooperation, resist unilateral pressure from third countries and maintain calm along the boundary. State-run Global Times highlighted this consensus, stating that 'stability and peace' in the border areas had been reaffirmed. Some Indian media outlets claimed China had relaxed controls on rare earth exports to India. Asked about this, Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Mao Ning said she was 'not aware of such a move' but added that Beijing sought uninterrupted supply chains and closer cooperation with partner economies. The Hindustan Times recently reported that China accounts for nearly 30 per cent of India's fertiliser imports, besides supplying rare earths for automobile components and tunnel-boring machines for infrastructure projects. Despite positive optics, official readouts from both capitals diverged on key issues. Beijing's statement claimed Jaishankar had acknowledged Taiwan as part of China. But India's foreign ministry clarified that New Delhi's position on Taiwan remained unchanged and that its economic, cultural and technological ties with Taipei would continue. On terrorism, India's official note said New Delhi strongly raised the issue with Wang Yi, recalling the SCO's founding objective of countering extremism. The Chinese release, however, made no reference to terrorism. Similarly, India flagged environmental concerns over China's planned mega dam on the Yarlung Tsangpo (Brahmaputra), stressing the need for transparency. This too was absent in Beijing's version. Chinese editorials have framed the visit as a step towards 'strategic space' for India. The China Daily wrote that New Delhi had little choice but to reassess its options after Washington doubled tariffs on Indian goods, despite India's alignment with the United States on several global issues. The paper argued that India's refusal to halt Russian oil imports further exposed its friction with American policy, pushing it to hedge by engaging China. The Global Times carried a similar theme, suggesting India's heavy dependence on the U.S. export market had become a vulnerability under rising tariffs, while Asian partnerships offered a safer alternative. Nationalist commentary platforms went further. A website, Guancha, quoted Fudan University scholar Lin Minwang as saying that closer ties with China could strengthen India's bargaining position with Washington. He also stressed that Beijing would never compromise on matters linked to core national interests. Wang Yi's visit, therefore, was more than a routine diplomatic stop. For Beijing, it was a moment to underline the potential of an India-China reset, driven as much by global economics as by shifting geopolitics.


Time of India
3 minutes ago
- Time of India
Easing of rare earths bottlenecks may clear way for Indian electronics firms
The electronics industry, arguably the biggest Make-in-India success story, could get a sustainable competitive edge globally on unexpected support from an otherwise strategic rival: move to ease export curbs on rare earth metals and critical minerals removes a critical input-supplies bottleneck for items such as electric cars, laptops, handphones, gaming consoles, or instruments with embedded software and display, industry executives told stabilising costs, the end to import curbs is likely to open new opportunities for advanced research and manufacturing in the earth metals are crucial for manufacturing magnets used in electronics, electric vehicles (EVs), robotics, and next-generation technologies. Earlier, India's electronics ecosystem had experienced disruptions, with Foxconn's Hyderabad plant producing Apple AirPods facing supply shortages after the initial Panda, managing director, Indian Metals and Ferro Alloys, said, 'Industry will be relieved by China lifting its export curbs on rare earth elements and critical minerals. Moreover, it is a positive development which will aid in the normalisation of ties that are in mutual interest.'The recent thaw in India-China relations will help to strengthen Beijing's industrial and diplomatic positions, Jason Oxman, President and CEO of Washington DC-based Information Technology Industry Council (ITI), told ET.'Whenever the US vacates policy space, China wins. Where Washington pulls back from trade agreements or imposes tariffs, Beijing steps in with offers of tariff-free trade. That is a long-term risk to U.S. competitiveness,' he electronics manufacturers also hailed the decision. Rajoo Goel, secretary general, Electronic Industries Association of India (ELCINA), told ET, "The bigger hit was for Indian electronics companies in wearables and electric vehicles (EVs), which rely on rare earth magnets in larger quantities. We heard from companies such as Brandworks and boAt which faced difficulties due to shortages. EV makers were also impacted because rare earths are critical for motors and battery systems. However, I would add that while production slowed, no company had to completely shut down operations."The main lesson from this short disruption is the importance of self-reliance and forward planning, he said. "Unlike China, India hasn't sufficiently invested in securing rare earth supply chains despite a decade of efforts to grow its electronics ecosystem. We need to anticipate such risks, prepare alternatives, and allocate resources for domestic exploration, research, and processing of these critical minerals," he said that the disruption has exposed how vulnerable India is to global shocks in critical minerals — and how urgent it is for the country to build its own rare earth Bhatia, managing director and partner, BCG India, told ET: "Curbs on export on the select rare earth elements and related magnets from China to India presented significant production risks to industries like automotive, consumer electronics, and wind power, and any change in the current status will be a welcome relief to the industry."China has a major global role across the rare earth value chain right from mining, oxide processing and downstream rare-earth industries accounting for more than 90% of global output with end products being leveraged across magnets, ceramics, catalysts, alloys etc, Bhatia explained."This is where India should actively be looking to build self-reliance through strategic acquisitions of assets globally via mechanisms like KABIL as well as encouraging the private sector to invest across the exploration, mining and downstream value chain," Bhatia or Khanij Bidesh India Limited, is a joint venture company of three Indian public sector enterprises: NALCO, HCL, and MECL. Its primary goal is to secure the supply of critical and strategic minerals for India by identifying, exploring, and acquiring resources from overseas. KABIL is actively engaged in sourcing lithium and cobalt, among other minerals, from countries like Argentina and Australia.A reliable supply, experts said, will help Indian manufacturers scale up production, stabilise costs of raw materials, and plan long-term investments in R& the larger implications of China's policy shift, T Senthil Siva Subramanian, head, Institute Industry Interface Programme, Hindustan College of Science and Technology (Sharda Group of Institutions), Mathura, told ET, 'Lifting export curbs on rare earth metals, particularly Yttrium, will catalyse growth in India's opto-electronics ecosystem. As the global leader in yttrium production , China's policy shift opens new avenues and enormous opportunities for India to accelerate innovation in advanced plasmonic sensing technologies.'He explained that Yttrium's unique hydrogen-sensing properties make it suitable for plasmonic hydrogen gas sensors, and with India advancing indigenous chip design and fabrication, Yttrium-based Sensor Systems on Chip (YSoC) could emerge as a sensors, he said, will be critical for defence, space exploration, and green energy initiatives, including the National Green Hydrogen Mission, Indian Semiconductor Mission, National Quantum Mission, and National Manufacturing Mission. The availability of rare earths, he added, will also empower Indian MSMEs to conduct research, innovate, and manufacture rare earth-based opto-electronic chips—marking a leap in India's domestic inputs from Subhayan Chakraborty and Tanya Pandey in New Delhi.