‘Modi the tiger and the rest are crows, monkeys, foxes’ says Ananth Kumar Hegde

‘Modi the tiger and the rest are crows, monkeys, foxes’ says Ananth Kumar Hegde
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Highlights

Veerappa Moily the Congress leader had a stinging rejoinder to the BJP\'s Ananth Kumar Hegde quote about Narendra Modi being a tiger while the opposite parties are \'crows, monkeys, foxes\'. \"The tiger has become wild, and has to be sent back to the forest,\" said Moily commenting on Hegde\'s quote.

NEW DELHI: Veerappa Moily the Congress leader had a stinging rejoinder to the BJP's Ananth Kumar Hegde quote about Narendra Modi being a tiger while the opposite parties are 'crows, monkeys, foxes'. "The tiger has become wild, and has to be sent back to the forest," said Moily commenting on Hegde's quote.

Yesterday, Hegde took a cue from his colleague and BJP president Amit Shah who not long ago likened the opposition to "snakes, dogs and cats".

"On one side crows, monkeys, foxes and others have come together, On the other side we have a tiger. In 2019, choose to elect the tiger,'' he said, referring to the opposition having come together in Karnataka and urging the public to vote for "tiger" Modi in the 2019 Lok Sabha elections.

Hegde, who's stirred controversy with his comments before, yesterday went on to talk, inexplicably, of chairs made out of gold and silver.

"We are sitting on plastic chairs isn't it?" he mock-asked the audience, and then answered himself.

"This is due to Congress rule, had we ruled for 70 years, you would have been sitting on silver chairs," said Hegde.

In December, Hegde made no friends when he said that those who are secular and who do not believe in religion and caste, have no self-identity or parentage. "Those who, without knowing about their parental blood, call themselves secular, they don't have their own identity. They don't know about their parentage, but they are intellectuals," he said at an event.

Also in December, Hegde said that he respects the Constitution but "it will be changed in the days to come".

Opposition parties called at him to be sacked for his remarks on the Constitution.

"Opposition parties are of the opinion that any minister who does not believe in the Constitution should have no place in the council of ministers. It is for the prime minister to take a call on him," said a Congress spokesman.

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