"We are showing a mirror to the BJP, who were calling us copy cat over the advertisement that we released yesterday. No particular word can be the monopoly of anybody," party spokesperson Shobha Oza said.
"Much before BJP or Narendra Modi used this phrase 'Mein Nahin Hum', a Congress councillor in Indore had put this in a poster during a mushaiara. So BJP's contention that Congress copied its slogan does not hold any water. The idea was already with Congress," she said.
Her remarks came a day after the Opposition went hammer and tongs against Congress advertisement with Rahul Gandhi at the centrestage of the campaign 'Mein Nahi, Hum' (Not I, we) which appeared in the newspapers.
Accusing Congress of plagiarism, the BJP had yesterday alleged that the party "copied" Modi's slogan.
Oza, however, claimed that Congress always believed in the principle of us and not me (Mein Nahin Hum) "unlike Modi, who is all for me, my and myself".
She said Congress being a more than 125 years old organisation does not need to borrow ideas from some other party.
