Stating that the party was keeping all its options open, Congress spokesperson Abhishek Singhvi warned MLAs of the "serious consequences" of anti-defection and anti-corruption laws that could bar them from contesting elections for up to six years and lead to imprisonment of up to seven years.
He recalled court judgements that termed defections a "constitutional sin" and unprincipled defections a "social evil".
"Crores of rupees have been spent in horse-trading in Gujarat by the BJP. You have seen this naked drama... The policy of the BJP in Gujarat is - by hook or by crook, come to power by breaking all laws," he told the media here.
While Amit Shah and Smriti Irani have been fielded by the BJP, the Congress has, for the third seat in the state, once again backed Ahmed Patel, the political secretary of Sonia Gandhi.
The defections may have a bearing on the election for this seat.
"The anti-defection law is supreme and repeatedly the Supreme Court has called defections a constitutional sin," Singhvi said.
"If the MLAs think they cannot come under the anti- defection law, they are mistaken. If found guilty under the law, they face future disqualification for six years," he said.
He added under the Prevention of Corruption Act receiving gratification for doing something in return was corruption and hinted the MLAs could face upto seven years in jail under the anti-corruption law.
As far as invocation and action were concerned, he said, "Let me assure you, all options are open to us, none are closed."
He hinted the Congress might move court.
He also pointed to the "dangerous game" the BJP was playing.
On whether it was a warning to the MLAs, he said, "Facts constitute warnings, facts constitute consequences, facts constitute reality and facts constitute truth taken in whichever adjective you like".
Singhvi accused the BJP of engineering defections by using "money, muscle and state power". Subverting the authority of elected governments "has become the hallmark of the ruling party", he said.
"The BJP believes in shamelessly denigrating, decimating and deprecating every institution of democracy and those institutions include Assemblies, Parliament, MLAs, MPs and all the Constitutional provisions against corruption and defection," he said.
Singhvi said the BJP's "lectures on morality and anti- corruption were in inverse proportion to its practice".
He cited the examples of Goa, Manipur and Arunachal Pradesh, where after having lost the peoples' mandate they made "every possible attempt to cobble up" a government by "undemocratic, illegal and immoral means".
The spokesperson described the developments in Bihar as a "conspiracy and collusion between our Prime Minister and a person seeking a continuous sixth term CMship, Nitish Kumar".
On Kumar switching sides, he said it was like "number portability" where the chief minister was the same, but the "service provider" had changed from the RJD to the BJP.
Referring to J&K Chief Minister Mehbooba Mufti, the Congress leader said the divergence of opinions between the two coalition partners (PDP and BJP) and the Centre, and within the partners, was "like the sky and the bottom of the ocean".
"This is just a camouflage of words to hide their differences. What the country wants, what the principal opposition wants, is an answer on the substance, not on words which camouflage this difference," he said.
Singhvi said it was an open secret that not a single policy of the Central government had been accepted or implemented in "a genuine spirited sense" by the J&K state government.
On another question on the Panama Papers, Singhvi said there was "zero tolerance as far as mere allegations and FIR" only when it came to the opposition.
"However, 100 per cent tolerance qua non-opposition leaders who may be in the same list with the same charge," he said.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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