Kolkata buzzed with anticipation as Union Home Minister Amit Shah on Monday articulated BJP’s transformative vows for West Bengal. Encompassing women’s advancement, youth opportunities, staff incentives, and robust policing, the promises aim to eclipse TMC’s decade-and-a-half disappointments.
Rs 5,700 crore earmarked for women-focused programs promises enhanced safety nets, self-sufficiency drives, and financial strengthening. Shah reiterated the paramount importance of dignity for Bengal’s female populace.
Resolving the 26,000 teachers’ imbroglio transparently with fiscal aid will rehabilitate education, he outlined.
Relief for government servants via 7th Pay Commission implementation, alongside vacancy fillings from December 26 and five-year age relaxations for job seekers, signals economic revitalization.
A crackdown awaits criminals under political cover, mafias, and crime lords. Infiltrators face identification, prosecution, and deportation, fortifying state security.
Shah interrogated TMC’s budget skew: Rs 80 crore for innovation versus madrasa extravagance. This path, he warned, dooms youth prospects while debt soars to Rs 8 lakh crore, encumbering infants with Rs 77,000 each.
TMC’s scandal sheet—teacher, civic, cattle, ration, MGNREGA, housing frauds—plus patronizing the DGP with Rajya Sabha perks, exemplifies misgovernance.
Loyal employees denied national pay norms deserve better. ‘BJP in power: 7th Pay within 45 days,’ Shah pledged, rallying for a scam-free, progressive Bengal.
