
Chair troubles Kadapa MLA again
Along with her husband R. Srinivasa Reddy, who is a member of the TDP Political bureau and the party's district president, the MLA arrived at the venue only to find the designated seats occupied by officials and their family members. After standing for a few minutes at the venue, the couple left without making much fuss.
Ms. Madhavi Reddy termed the incident 'a clear violation of the protocol' and said she would complain about the issue to the Speaker and the Privileges Committee. Saying that she had no hard feelings towards anyone, the Government Whip, however, insisted that her seat deserved respect.
A video of the incident was widely circulated on social media platforms, triggering a debate.
It may be recalled that the MLA had hit the headlines in the past, when she was allegedly denied a chair in the Kadapa Municipal Council meeting, where she stood next to the YSRCP Mayor's chair throughout the entire proceedings.
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Hans India
a few seconds ago
- Hans India
You don't deserve to speak about RSS or PM Modi: K'taka BJP to CM Siddaramaiah
Bengaluru: Responding to Karnataka Chief Minister Siddaramaiah's criticism against Prime Minister Narendra Modi for praising the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) in his 79th Independence Day address from the Red Fort, Karnataka BJP criticised the CM for it and said that he does not deserve to speak about the RSS or PM Modi. Karnataka BJP President, B.Y. Vijayendra stated on Saturday, "Standing under the shadow of the Congress, which still carries a slave mentality that insults the freedom struggle even today, you don't deserve to speak about the RSS or Prime Minister Narendra Modi." "Chief Minister Siddaramaiah, you are not an original Congressman. You come from a political background that opposed the 'Emergency'. By standing today in defence of the Congress party, you are insulting the many great leaders of the 1970s who fought against the Emergency to safeguard democracy and uphold the true spirit of the freedom movement. Having joined Congress for selfish and power-driven politics, you have lost all moral right to speak about the Constitution and democracy," Vijayendra slammed. "Siddaramaiah, you called the mentioning of the RSS' contributions in the Independence Day speech an insult to the Constitution. But it was the Congress party during the Emergency that trampled upon the spirit of the Constitution, strangled democracy, and displayed authoritarianism. That is the biggest black mark in India's political history," he charged. Vijayendra further stated, "The RSS is not a political party. It is a patriotic organisation that was born for nation-building, has endured for a century, and works with the principles of service and equality. The dedication and sacrifice of countless RSS volunteers working to build a casteless society was even recognised by Mahatma Gandhi, whose words of appreciation are recorded in history." "During the China war, the RSS actively stood with the brave soldiers in service of the nation. Recognising this, then Prime Minister Nehru himself invited the RSS to participate in the Republic Day parade as a mark of appreciation for its service," he pointed out. "With noble ideals, goals, and objectives, the RSS has expanded its activities beyond India's borders, representing Indian values globally. Prime Minister Narendra Modi rightly mentioned the achievements and service of the RSS in his Independence Day address, praising the organisation for carrying forward the purpose of the freedom struggle. "This is both timely and reflective of the sentiments of more than a billion Indians. It is surprising why the Congress party and Chief Minister Siddaramaiah are so disturbed by this," he questioned. "The Congress was originally organized under that name to spread the freedom movement across the country. After Independence, the Congress name should have been dissolved and not retained as a political party. "Many freedom fighters, including Mahatma Gandhi himself, had suggested this. Ignoring that advice, the Congress continued as a political party, which today remains tightly controlled by a single family. Its politics and actions, often against the nation's interest, are well known to the people of this country. This is the very reason why the Congress today has been pushed to a marginal position on India's political map," Vijayendra claimed. Leader of the Opposition R. Ashoka commenting on the development, stated, "Leaders like Mahatma Gandhi, Babasaheb Ambedkar, and Jayaprakash Narayan, beyond party lines and ideological differences, had expressed appreciation for the service, dedication, equality, and spirit of brotherhood upheld by the RSS. This is recorded in history." "In 1934, when Gandhiji visited an RSS camp, he witnessed volunteers living together like children of the same mother, united with the sole goal of serving the nation, without any distinctions of caste, religion, or community. Seeing this, he remarked, 'The RSS has fulfilled my dream of building a casteless, untouchability-free society,'' Ashoka underlined. "By insulting the RSS, you may please the Congress high command and the Gandhi family. You may also flatter a few Leftists and intellectuals, who are always lurking nearby to implement their secret agendas. But no patriot of this country will forgive the Congress party's act of insulting a nationalist organisation for political gain. Do not belittle yourself in the eyes of millions of patriots just to please a handful of people," he stated. Earlier, taking to social media X on Friday, CM Siddaramaiah stated, "On his Independence Day speech from the Red Fort, Prime Minister Narendra Modi called the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) the world's biggest NGO. Let's be clear: It is not an NGO; it is the world's biggest for-political profit, for-hate, and most divisive organisation - unregistered, non tax-paying, and conspiring to pit Indians against each other."

The Wire
a few seconds ago
- The Wire
Tryst with Destiny, Yet Unfulfilled
Independence is not a trophy but a foundation – one that requires building roads and rights, protecting the vulnerable, and ensuring every citizen finds belonging in this republic. At the stroke of midnight on August 14-15, 1947, Jawaharlal Nehru stood before the Constituent Assembly and spoke words that would resonate through time: 'Long years ago we made a tryst with destiny…and at the stroke of the midnight hour…India will awake to life and freedom.' These were not just words of triumph but a clarion call to transform a nation scarred by centuries of colonial oppression into a republic of dignity, justice, and opportunity. As India celebrates its Independence Day in 2025, nearing the centenary of that historic moment, Nehru's vision remains a lodestar – yet the pledge to redeem that tryst 'not wholly or in full measure, but very substantially' stands at a crossroads. India's ascent as a global power is undeniable. Still, the chasm between macroeconomic triumphs and individual welfare, coupled with strains on democratic institutions, demands a renewed commitment to the ideals of 1947. India's economic rise is a testament to its resilience. With a nominal GDP exceeding US $ 4 trillion in 2025, India has surpassed Japan to become the fourth-largest economy, trailing only the United States, China, and Germany. Forecasts project real GDP growth of 6.2% in 2025 and 6.3% in 2026, outpacing the global average of 2.8%. This growth reflects the ambition Nehru envisioned—a nation seizing opportunity from the ashes of colonial exploitation. The Green Revolution transformed India from a famine-prone land into a global food exporter, while missions like Chandrayaan-3 and Mangalyaan have positioned India among the space-faring elite. Digital infrastructure, from UPI's global-standard payment systems to widespread internet penetration, underscores India's technological leap. These achievements embody the 'flushing of the dawn' Nehru foresaw, where a nation's suppressed soul finds expression. Yet, this aggregate success masks a profound paradox. India's per capita GDP, estimated at US $ 2,754 to 2,880, ranks in the 140s globally, revealing a stark disconnect between national wealth and individual prosperity. The World Inequality Lab notes that the top 1% capture nearly 23% of national income, while the bottom 50% share just 13%. The Human Development Index (HDI) for 2023 placed India at 0.685 (130th globally), with an inequality-adjusted HDI of 0.475. While only 5.25% of the population lives below US $ 3 per day, 82% survive on less than USD 8.30 daily. These figures expose a nation where economic might has not translated into inclusive welfare. Rural areas, in particular, lag in access to quality education, healthcare, and livelihoods, while caste, gender, and regional disparities persist. Nehru's tryst was not just with power but with equity—a promise yet to be fully redeemed. The colonial legacy Nehru spoke against set the stage for these challenges. As Shashi Tharoor details in Inglorious Empire, India's global GDP share plummeted from 23–27% in the early 18th century to 3–4% by 1947 due to systematic British exploitation. Land revenue systems and commercial cropping triggered chronic famines, claiming millions of lives. Artisans were crushed by cheap European imports, and forests vital to indigenous communities were ravaged by colonial policies. Partition's communal violence and mass migration – displacing up to 10 million – left a fractured society and economy. Against this backdrop, India's nation-building was a Herculean feat. Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel's unification of over 560 princely states reshaped the subcontinent's map, while the Constituent Assembly, under leaders like B.R. Ambedkar, crafted a Constitution that enshrined universal adult suffrage and reservations for marginalized communities. Institutions like the Indian Institutes of Technology, the Planning Commission, and the All India Institute of Medical Sciences laid the foundation for progress, embodying Nehru's call for a republic that dreams big. Today, however, such institutions face mounting pressures, from politicised appointments and budgetary constraints to ideological interference, as the Modi government increasingly seeks to align their functioning with its own narratives, often at the cost of academic freedom, autonomy, and long-term vision. Further, the democratic institutions that were the bedrock of this vision are now under strain. The 2025 electoral cycle in Bihar has ignited a firestorm, with the Election Commission of India (ECI) removing 6.5 million names —8.3% of the electorate—during a Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of voter lists. Opposition leaders, including Rahul Gandhi, have accused the ECI of voter manipulation, alleging the inclusion of fake names and the deletion of valid voters, with claims of dual EPIC numbers issued to BJP leaders. In Mahadevapura, protests erupted over alleged voter suppression, while nationwide torch marches, signature campaigns, and rallies demanded electoral transparency. In Delhi, approximately 300 opposition leaders were detained during a march to the ECI office. Analysts have warned of 'thermonuclear fallout' for democratic trust, urging the ECI to publish voter roll data and address allegations decisively. These concerns extend beyond Bihar. In Rajasthan, former chief minister Ashok Gehlot criticised amendments to the ECI appointment process – replacing the Chief Justice of India with the Union home minister on the selection panel – as a blow to democratic integrity. In Tripura, former chief minister Manik Sarkar accused the BJP of tampering with voter rolls, undermining institutional trust. In Kerala's Thrissur, allegations of mass fake voting prompted calls for a repoll, with the education minister labelling it a 'democratic massacre.' Reports also suggest that 6.5 million citizens, particularly migrant labourers and marginalised communities, face disenfranchisement due to documentation issues, threatening the inclusive democracy Nehru championed. These incidents highlight the fragility of India's democratic scaffolding and the urgent need for institutional reform. Nehru's speech was not mere rhetoric but a blueprint for responsibility. His call to 'be brave, wise, and ready to grasp opportunity' shaped early governance, from the Panchayati Raj system that decentralised power to the establishment of nuclear and space programs under Homi Bhabha and Vikram Sarabhai. Secularism and pluralism, central to the republic's identity, helped sustain unity despite Partition's wounds. Yet, Nehru's caution that 'as long as there are tears and suffering, so long our work will not be over' remains prescient. Inequalities across caste, gender, region, and class persist, with access to quality education, healthcare, and livelihoods unevenly distributed. The political culture, too, has shifted. Nehru's warning against 'petty and destructive criticism' or 'ill will' resonates in an era of polarised discourse and image-driven politics, where credit-grabbing often overshadows institutional commitment. India's global vision, rooted in Nehru's Non-Aligned Movement, continues to inspire. By offering an alternative path for post-colonial nations, India championed a world where freedom was a universal right, not a privilege tied to superpower allegiance. This legacy endures as India supports democratic institution-building across Asia and Africa, from sharing electoral expertise to aiding infrastructure development. Yet, domestically, the nation must confront its own democratic deficits. The ECI's credibility hinges on transparent action – publishing voter data, investigating allegations, and restoring public trust. Economic policies must prioritise per capita prosperity, ensuring growth benefits the many, not just the few. Civil liberties – freedom to dissent, question, and protest—must be safeguarded as fiercely as economic targets. Pluralism, India's greatest strength, must be nurtured, not tokenised. As India celebrates yet another year of independence, the grandeur of 1947 still propels us. The nation's successes; economic, scientific, and democratic, are remarkable, yet they must be matched by renewed commitment to equality, justice, and institutional integrity. The path forward demands humility and urgency. The ECI must act decisively to restore trust, while economic policymaking must bridge the gap between national ambition and social uplift. Education and healthcare must reach the marginalised, and democracy must remain a lived reality, not a procedural formality. Nehru's 'Tryst with Destiny' was not a moment of closure but a call to perpetual action. He spoke of a future glimpsed 'in the flushing of the dawn,' urging resolve and self-awareness. In 2025, that dawn demands vigilance. Independence is not a trophy but a foundation – one that requires building roads and rights, protecting the vulnerable, and ensuring every citizen finds belonging in this republic. The noble mansion of Free India, as Nehru envisioned, is not constructed with bricks of power alone but with the steadfast labor of inclusion, the scaffolding of institutions, and the open door of opportunity. The tryst with destiny, far from redeemed, beckons us to act—not with nostalgia, but with the courage to forge a nation where liberty is real in every life, not just in every ledger. Let us step forward, as Nehru urged, with humility and ardor, to fulfil the pledge made long years ago. Amal Chandra is an author, political analyst and columnist. He posts on X @ens_socialis Thirunavukarasu S. is a Junior Research Fellow, Doctoral Research Scholar at University of Madras. The Wire is now on WhatsApp. Follow our channel for sharp analysis and opinions on the latest developments. Advertisement


Time of India
9 minutes ago
- Time of India
India bets on mature-node chipmaking; China+1 trend boosts manufacturing role: Report
AI image India's semiconductor plans are beginning to take shape, with a deliberate focus on producing mature-node chips rather than competing in the global race for cutting-edge technology. The country is targeting the 28nm to 65nm range to meet rising demand in sectors such as automotive, telecommunications, and industrial electronics. An analysis by Bastion Research cited by news agency ANI notes that while India has yet to make major progress in building advanced semiconductor fabs, it is strategically positioning itself to fill a 'critical gap' in the global supply chain. 'Though today there is not much to share as far as India's progress in establishing a semiconductor fab is concerned, one thing is clear – India's semiconductor ambitions are taking shape with a strategic focus on mature-node manufacturing,' the report stated. The study compared India's current stage to Taiwan and South Korea's semiconductor journey in the 1970s–1990s. India is already gaining ground in system integration, particularly in automotive electronics, telecom, consumer devices, and medical technology. The country's talent pool and technical capabilities are seen as matching global standards, with rapid progress in scaling operations. The report adds that the global 'China +1' strategy is benefiting India, as companies seek to diversify supply chains away from China. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Why Home Decor Enthusiasts Love This Lamp topgadgetlife Shop Now Undo The government's Semicon India Programme, launched in 2021 with Rs 76,000 crore in incentives, focuses on attracting manufacturers, establishing fabs, and building a local supply chain. Recent approvals under the India Semiconductor Mission (ISM) include four new projects worth Rs 4,600 crore in Odisha, Andhra Pradesh, and Punjab, taking the total ISM portfolio to 10 projects across six states with investments of Rs 1.6 lakh crore. Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced on Independence Day that India-made semiconductor chips will hit the market by the end of this year. New Delhi has already approved the construction of six semiconductor plants. In May, the Union cabinet cleared the country's sixth unit, a semiconductor manufacturing facility in Jewar, western Uttar Pradesh. The plant, to be located near Jewar Airport, will be set up through a joint venture between the HCL Group and Taiwanese electronics major Foxconn. Of the other five plants, four are based in Gujarat: the Tata Electronics–PSMC Semiconductor fabrication plant, the CG Power–Renesas–Stars Microelectronics ATMP unit, Micron Technology's ATMP facility, and the Kaynes Semicon ATMP unit. The remaining project, the Tata Semiconductor Assembly and Test (TSAT) unit, is located in Assam. Stay informed with the latest business news, updates on bank holidays , public holidays , current gold rate and silver price .