BJP's Dilip Ghosh rejects speculations of joining TMC after meeting Bengal CM Mamata at Digha Jagannath temple
Mr. Ghosh, along with his newly-married wife Rinku Majumdar, visited the temple, built by the TMC government, on Wednesday and met Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee, triggering speculations that he may jump ship ahead of the 2026 assembly elections.
"Our party did not ask us to skip the invitation. I have been invited, and that is the reason I have come here. I have got the guts to do so," Mr. Ghosh told reporters during the morning with his wife at the Digha sea beach.
"Why do lakhs of people go to the Ram temple in Ayodhya and the Kashi Viswanath temple in Varanasi? Even Mamata Banerjee had asked her party leaders not to go to Kumbh Mela, but there were many who went. Have they committed any crime? Do you know who built the Kalighat and Dakshineswar temples? It is not important who built the temple, people go because god is worshipped there," he added.
Asked about the speculations of joining the TMC, Mr. Ghosh shot back, "Why should I?"
"I am not having a bad time. I have not changed in the last 10 years, I have not changed my party like many others who switch sides whenever there is an election. Dilip Ghosh does not need to change sides," he said.
Mr. Ghosh's visit to the temple and subsequent meeting with Ms. Banerjee, a part of which was live-streamed on the CM's Facebook page, raised several eyebrows, with BJP leaders not hiding their anguish.
Sharing a photo of the meeting between Mr. Ghosh and Ms. Banerjee, senior BJP leader Swapan Dasgupta said in a post on X, "The outrage among grassroots BJP Bengal workers at this apparent betrayal by a former state president is too deafening for the national leadership to ignore."
Mr. Ghosh, the former MP of Kharagpur, tackled the criticisms nonchalantly.
"People keep on talking about Dilip Ghosh. Even if they talk negatively, that works as an advertisement for me," he said.
State BJP president Sukanta Majumdar said the party did not endorse the visit.
"It's Dilip Ghosh's personal choice. But the party doesn't endorse the visit. Many of our MLAs were invited, but nobody visited due to the atrocities against Hindus in various places of the state," he said.
Asked about the visit, Leader of the Opposition Suvendu Adhikari said, "I don't want to talk about him."

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


Indian Express
27 minutes ago
- Indian Express
‘Will teach you a lesson': NCP (SP) MLA Rohit Pawar booked for shouting at Mumbai cop
NCP (SP) MLA Rohit Pawar was booked on the charge of obstructing public servants in discharging duty after he shouted at a sub-inspector inside a police station here while trying to meet a party worker injured in a clash, an official said on Sunday. A viral video shows Rohit Pawar, grandnephew of NCP (SP) chief Sharad Pawar, yelling at the sub-inspector in Marathi, 'Keep your voice down, keep your voice down. If you raise your hand, I will teach you a lesson'. The incident unfolded after Rohit Pawar had gone to Azad Maidan police station in south Mumbai along with NCP (SP) MLA Jitendra Awhad to meet an injured party worker following a clash in the Maharashtra Vidhan Bhavan building between supporters of Awhad and BJP legislator Gopichand Padalkar on Thursday. After the clash, members of both groups were detained inside the Vidhan Bhavan and were eventually handed over to the police. Based on a complaint, a case has been registered against Rohit Pawar for allegedly obstructing public servants in discharging duty, an official said. Deputy Chief Minister Ajit Pawar, meanwhile, expressed his displeasure at Rohit Pawar's behaviour, saying such conduct by a few leaders maligns the image of all public representatives. 'Many people and even journalists are saying that they (MLAs) have started thinking themselves too smart and think that they are above the law. When a few public representatives behave wrongly, everyone gets blamed,' he told reporters in Pune when asked about the viral video of his nephew Rohit Pawar. Earlier in the day, the Pune Guardian Minister chaired a meeting of officials of various departments. 'No public representative, including myself, should behave in such a manner. We must act in accordance with the tradition of cultured Maharashtra, keeping in mind the Constitution and the rule of law laid by Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar, and the teachings of the late Yashwantrao Chavan,' Ajit Pawar added.


The Hindu
27 minutes ago
- The Hindu
BJP high command is yet to ask me to resign: Raja Singh
Hyderabad Goshamhal MLA T. Raja Singh, who is yet to resign despite the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) 'suspending' him from the party, said that the party high command has not given him any indication to quit. 'If they ask me to resign, I will do it immediately and contest as an Independent,' Mr. Raja Singh said on Sunday, while speaking to reporters in Hyderabad after performing puja for Bonalu. 'If Union Home Minister Amit Shah asks me to resign, I will do so immediately.' Mr. Singh also made it clear that he would not join the Congress that has a 'political association with the AIMIM'. I will work with any organisation that works for Sanatana Dharma, he said. However, he said that he would extend help to anyone in establishing a model Goshala. He claimed that a senior Congress Minister spoke to him and asked for his cooperation for the Goshala. 'I don't mind which party he is from as long as the goal is the same,' he said, claiming that the previous governments politicised the reshaping of the historic Simhawahini Mahakali temple. 'I want the Congress government to build it in a grand manner,' he said. Replying to a query that Madhavi Latha, who contested as the BJP candidate against Asaduddin Owaisi in the LS elections, wanted to be considered for the Goshamahal bypoll, he said that he was ready to contest against anyone. 'The people of Goshamahal will decide who has worked for them and kept the Hindutva flag high', he said.


The Hindu
27 minutes ago
- The Hindu
Mysuru event was held to floor DKS, says BJP
The Opposition BJP has described the episode of Chief Minister Siddaramaiah not acknowledging the earlier presence of Deputy Chief Minister D.K. Shivakumar at the Sadhana Samavesha in Mysuru as a clear indication of internal rift in the Congress coming out in open. They have also termed the Mysuru programme as an event organised to sideline and floor Mr. Shivakumar rather than project the government's achievements. Speaking to presspersons here on Sunday, Leader of Opposition in the Assembly R. Ashok said the public meeting had exposed the internal rift within Congress. 'The meeting was held to teach Mr. Shivakumar a lesson. Mr. Shivakumar has now been reduced to being a second-class citizen in in his own party. It was not a government programme; it was a ritual to politically finish off Mr. Shivakumar,' he said. 'This is a feud between Mr. Shivakumar and Mr. Siddaramaiah. The BJP does not need to topple this government; it will collapse due to internal conflicts. AICC general secretary Randeep Singh Surjewala came to the State and heard the grievances of MLAs. But their disputes are now out in the open,' he remarked. Taking serious exception to AICC president Mallikarjun Kharge referring to Prime Minister Narendra Modi as 'barker', Mr. Ashok said such comments reflected the mindset of Congress leaders. 'The language used by Mr. Kharge is shameful and beneath the dignity of public life. Knowing that they will not come to power, they are resorting to such low-level remarks,' he alleged. From 'Maut ka Saudagar' to 'Zehreela Saap' to now this, personal abuse has become the only political currency of the Congress, he alleged. 'India is roaring under Mr. Modi, and that is the real problem of the Congress. They cannot digest the fact that a self-made leader is taking India to new heights, without their (Congress) dynasty,' he remarked.