Results of the 2024 Maharashtra Assembly Election: "Cannot believe Maharashtra, which listened to me as head of family during COVID, will behave with me this way" stated Uddhav Thackeray.New Delhi: Following the startling reversal, Uddhav Thackeray, the former Maharashtra chief minister who had lost the most significant prestige struggle of his life, seemed stunned. He asked reporters this evening how four months could produce such a significant difference after the opposition alliance Maha Vikas Aghadi released a result that differed greatly from the Lok Sabha election tally.
"It's unbelievable that Maharashtra, who heard me speak as the leader of the family during COVID, would treat me in this manner... In barely four months, how did the ruling alliance manage to secure so many seats? The 64-year-old said, "Where did they light candles for such a result?"
"People listened to us, not to Modi and Amit Shah," he claimed, asserting that the MVA rallies drew a larger crowd than those of the ruling alliance. They don't have to listen to them, the people remarked. Did they choose to cast their votes without considering their opinions? "How can an empty chair turn into votes?" he asked, adding sarcastically.
However, Mr. Thackeray ignored the main talking issue, which the winning combo had emphasized time and time again: does it now prove "Who is the real Shiv Sena"? He assertively pointed the finger at the courts, where the issue is still unresolved, saying, "For the last many years, we have not received a decision on the party name and election symbol."
The renegade faction of Mr. Shinde quickly declared it an ideological triumph after framing the election contest as a test of "Who is the real Shiv Sena?"
Following the party's outstanding showing in Haryana, which many saw as widespread anti-incumbency sentiment against the Nayab Singh Saini government, the BJP and its allies won the election.
"People listened to us, not to Modi and Amit Shah," he claimed, asserting that the MVA rallies drew a larger crowd than those of the ruling alliance. They don't have to listen to them, the people remarked. Did they choose to cast their votes without considering their opinions? "How can an empty chair turn into votes?" he asked, adding sarcastically.
However, Mr. Thackeray ignored the main talking issue, which the winning combo had emphasized time and time again: does it now prove "Who is the real Shiv Sena"? He assertively pointed the finger at the courts, where the issue is still unresolved, saying, "For the last many years, we have not received a decision on the party name and election symbol."
The renegade faction of Mr. Shinde quickly declared it an ideological triumph after framing the election contest as a test of "Who is the real Shiv Sena?"
Following the party's outstanding showing in Haryana, which many saw as widespread anti-incumbency sentiment against the Nayab Singh Saini government, the BJP and its allies won the election.
However, Mr. Thackeray presented the issue in a different light.
"JP Nadda, the leader of the BJP, stated a few years ago that there would only be one party. He remarked, "It appears that they are heading in the same direction—one party, one nation." "I would tell people not to lose hope," he stated.
However, the head of Sena UBT did not point the finger at the electronic voting machines. "Some claim that this victory is the result of EVM. "I have no issues if people have accepted it," he continued.
"JP Nadda, the leader of the BJP, stated a few years ago that there would only be one party. He remarked, "It appears that they are heading in the same direction—one party, one nation." "I would tell people not to lose hope," he stated.
However, the head of Sena UBT did not point the finger at the electronic voting machines. "Some claim that this victory is the result of EVM. "I have no issues if people have accepted it," he continued.
The Maha Vikas Aghadi's significant setbacks occur just six months after the alliance's impressive showing in the Lok Sabha election, which many claimed demonstrated the public's disapproval of the political turmoil of the previous two years, including the split in the Shiv Sena, the fall of the Uddhav Thackeray government, and the subsequent split in Sharad Pawar's Nationalist Congress Party.
0 Comments