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Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Saturday, 4 November, said the Congress has conceded defeat in Himachal Pradesh as its senior leaders have "run away" from campaigning in the state, leaving Chief Minister Virbhadra Singh to his fate.
Addressing a rally in Himachal Pradesh’s largest district Kangra, Modi launched a blistering attack on the Congress over corruption, linking the party to termites, and exhorted the people to finish it off by handing over three-fourths majority to the BJP in the 9 November Assembly elections.
In a reference to the Congress' decision to mark the first anniversary of demonetisation as ‘Black Day,’ the PM said the Opposition party would observe "Black Money Day" and burn his effigies as it was angry with his fight against corruption.
Modi claimed that the poor and the middle-class were back to work, but the dishonest people were angry with him and wanted to seek revenge as he forced them to deposit their bagful of cash in the banks.
Seeking strong mandate in favour of the BJP, he said the state had progressed most when Prem Kumar Dhumal was its chief minister and Atal Bihari Vajpayee was the prime minister, as the Central government pumped in money which Dhumal used to effectively develop Himachal.
Modi said he and Dhumal, who is the party's chief ministerial candidate, would take the state to new heights of development, adding that its infrastructure and tourism sectors needed a boost.
(With inputs from PTI)
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