BJP firebrand Dilip Ghosh electrified Kolkata on February 20, claiming West Bengal’s populace is poised for revolution against TMC, whose efforts to cling on will prove futile. He zeroed in on TMC’s SRE hostility as evidence of their jitters.
‘TMC is spooked, opposing SRE, legal systems, and EC,’ Ghosh remarked to media. ‘We’re the primary rival, so they hound our members. But transformation grips Bengal’s grassroots—folks demand it, beyond TMC’s control.’
On Bishnu Prasad Sharma’s TMC move, Ghosh was dismissive yet forward-looking. ‘Pact-bound, he ran on our symbol sans conviction in BJP ethos. Electoral outcomes sorted it—we’ll deploy a battle-tested contender there.’
Ghosh critiqued freebie politics sweeping India. ‘Universal practice, parties do it somewhat. Modi ji flagged fund misuse for non-development. Entrenched as custom. Wins evade freebie-heavy strategies—Delhi’s ex-govt’s bounties flopped. Failing admins announce them to dodge accountability.’
Bengal’s woes dominated: trashed roads, youth job drought. ‘Freebies delude, not deliver.’
For ‘The Kerala Story 2’ protests, Ghosh upheld cinematic candor. ‘Seeing fact as hate confirms its presence. Films illuminate for evolution. Suppression invites escalation.’
Ghosh’s vision paints BJP as change architects, ready to capitalize on Bengal’s discontent.
