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Almost two years after abandoning her poll campaign midway in Varanasi, United Progress Alliance (UPA) chairperson Sonia Gandhi hit the campaign trail in Karnataka on Tuesday, 8 May, launching a blistering attack on Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his government.
Addressing a public rally in Vijayapura, Bijapur, Gandhi emphasised on the Congress party's pro-poor orientation, while accusing PM Modi of "insulting not only the farmers but also the state of Karnataka".
She added that the central government had been "working in a biased manner" against the state, and credited the Congress for starting numerous schemes for the people and making Karnataka "the country's number one state".
The UPA chairperson further slammed the PM, saying that while he is a "very good orator", his speeches cannot fill empty stomachs and end hunger in the country.
Apart from accusing Modi of "distorting historical facts" and using names of historical personalities for his political motives, Gandhi also took a jibe at him for “obsessing over a Congress-mukt bharat (a Congress-free India)".
It is not yet clear whether Gandhi will be addressing more rallies in Karnataka after Tuesday, before the state goes to polls on 12 May.
Party sources had earlier told PTI that she was to address only Tuesday's rally.
The former Congress chief was taken ill during a road show in Varanasi on 2 August 2016, ahead of the Uttar Pradesh Assembly elections.
In her absence, it was her son Rahul Gandhi who had steered the party's campaign.
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