Politics

"Only love, trust, respect, loyalty:" Priyanka Gandhi rubbishes BJP's theory of 'tussle' between her, Rahul

Congress general secretary Priyanka Gandhi on Wednesday rubbished the claims by Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) IT cell head Amit Malviya about a 'tussle' between her and her brother Rahul Gandhi.

New Delhi | Congress general secretary Priyanka Gandhi on Wednesday rubbished the claims by Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) IT cell head Amit Malviya about a 'tussle' between her and her brother Rahul Gandhi saying that her brother and she shares "love, trust, respect and loyalty for each other and will remain so forever."

Lambasting the BJP for not focussing on "inflation" and "unemployment" and instead cracking their brains on such "nonsensical" issues, Priyanka Gandhi posted a message on X saying, "BJP people, in this era of inflation and unemployment, is this the only nonsense issue left? Sorry….but this dream from your little mind will never come true. My brother and

I have only love, trust, respect and loyalty for each other and will remain so

forever."

Wishing the BJP on Raksha Bandhan, Priyanka Gandhi said that crores of sisters and brothers across the country will break their arrogance of lies, loot and hollow propaganda.

"By the way, do not panic. We, both brother and sister, will break the arrogance of your lies, loot and hollow propaganda together with crores of sisters and brothers of the country. Happy Raksha Bandhan. It is a festival of love between brothers and sisters, celebrate it with a positive spirit," she said on X.

Her remarks came soon after BJP IT cell head Amit Malviya posted a video highlighting a possible tussle between Rahul Gandhi and Priyanka Gandhi on X.

139 Maoists surrender in two days as government vows 'Naxal free Bharat'

Green concrete, grid-feeding cars among solutions to accelerate climate action: WEF

India-Indonesia joint maritime exercise at Visakhapatnam from Oct 14-17

SC permits sale, bursting of green crackers in Delhi-NCR on Diwali

UN agency says C02 levels hit record high last year, causing more extreme weather