The party alleged that the Narendra Modi government was "undermining and sabotaging" public interest through its approach and also slammed the Prime Minister over India's handling of the ceasefire violations by Pakistan.
On the MGNREGA and drug-pricing issues, Congress spokesperson Abhishek Singhvi said, "It is unfortunate that politics has reached such low levels and got debased so much... BJP is undermining and sabotaging the public interest programme.
Maintaining that the wage component was the heart and soul of the job scheme, Singhvi said that the government's decision to reduce the wage component would directly lead to job cuts. He said that the move was being mulled despite opposition by NGOs and support for the existing module of the scheme.
Alleging it was being done "purely for cheap political gains" and to show "antagonism and anger" towards the measures taken by the previous Congress-led UPA regime, Singhvi said that the move needs to be deprecated.
He alleged that the NDA government had gone for the de-control just before Modi's US visit and after "completely jettisoning and abandoning India's interest".
He averred that it was not proper for the NDA government to have withdrawn it "merely because UPA had in 2012 expanded the ambit" of drug regulation. The approach, he charged, "smacks of cheap political vendetta".
"Selective amnesia is a very bad disease. Do to others what you want others to do to you. Modi should have realised that before making such comments," Singhvi said.
