Delhi buzzed with innovation at the colossal AI Summit, a event BJP’s Tarun Chugh celebrated as validation of India’s world-class tech ecosystem. Referencing Shashi Tharoor’s comments, Chugh positioned it as a benchmark of national excellence under PM Modi’s watch.
The stats are staggering—644 AI solutions demoed, 41 global CEOs engaged, 326 participants from 37 nations, and 250,000-plus visitors. Chugh, in an in-depth media interaction, linked this to India’s enhanced global footprint.
Key moment: the debut of three indigenous LLMs, symbolizing Atmanirbharta and developmental ambitions. ‘Modi ji’s leadership is turning vision into reality,’ Chugh enthused.
Geopolitically, he alleged discomfort from China and Pakistan over India’s AI dominance, extending criticism to Congress for seemingly aligned rhetoric—a counterproductive dynamic.
In Himachal Pradesh, Chugh decried Congress’s economic mismanagement, spotlighting the entry toll tax amid a pattern of levies: toilet charges, tourism duties, and fiscal impositions at holy places. ‘Big promises, bigger burdens—BJP reliefs reversed, people pay the price,’ he charged.
For ‘Kerala Story 2’, Chugh pushed for transparency on Kerala women’s plight and covert threats. ‘Suppressing facts worsens crises; vigilance and action heal society,’ he advised.
BJP’s Naqvi, on loudspeakers, reinforced legal universality: ‘Be it worship, rallies, or festivals, noise laws bind all. Responsibility lies with every individual.’
The summit transcends tech—it’s a canvas for political narratives on innovation, accountability, and cultural candor, propelling India’s discourse forward.
