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Meira Kumar, the opposition's presidential nominee, on Saturday asserted that she was not a "scapegoat" in the upcoming election to the country's top constitutional post as she was fighting for an ideology. She said in response to a question on whether she was being made a scapegoat in the presidential election:
Union Minister and Republican Party of India (RPI) leader Ramdas Athawale took a dig at the Congress on Friday saying it was using Kumar as a "scapegoat" by fielding her as the opposition candidate in the 17 July presidential election.
Kumar, a former Lok Sabha speaker and the daughter of iconic Dalit leader Jagjivan Ram, was speaking to reporters after meeting the Congress MPs and MLAs at the Karnataka Pradesh Congress Committee office in Bengaluru. Seventeen opposition parties have fielded Kumar as their joint candidate in the presidential election against NDA's nominee Ram Nath Kovind.
Kumar wondered:
Pointing out that she launched her campaign from the Sabarmati Ashram in Gujarat, Kumar said, “I am carrying forward those values and principles which are sacred to most of my countrymen and women.” She added:
Kumar also met former Prime Minister and Janata Dal (Secular) supremo H D Deve Gowda and sought his party's support to her candidature.
Kumar said, “ We have to come out of this mentality [...] even in 2017, people with high qualifications are talking about castes. When both the sides had fielded candidates from higher castes in the past, no one discussed about it. We were not even aware of their castes. We were only aware of their accomplishments, experience and capabilities and only those things were discussed.”
Asked if she would meet Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar in the run-up to the election, Kumar said she had written a letter to him and would decide on meeting him when she visited the eastern state.
Going against the decision of its alliance partners, the RJD and the Congress, Nitish Kumar's JD(U) has decided to back the candidature of former Bihar governor Kovind. Meira Kumar, the Opposition's presidential nominee, also hails from Bihar.
Kumar added, “We do not just have to be tolerant towards the other religions, but be respectful towards them. That was Gandhi ji's ideology and we have always carried that forward.”
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