It is not a "game changer" but a "name changer government" which has failed to deliver on all fronts be it providing relief to farmers and poor, generate jobs or addressng the Kashmir issue, it said.
Participating in the debate on the Motion of Thanks for the President's address, Leader of Oppositon Ghulam Nabi Azad attacked the government for creating fear, not only among people but also among the bureaucrats and opposition leaders.
Azad alleged that opposition party leaders were being treated as "potential terrorists" and their phones were being tapped. "No one today talks to me over phone because they say your phone is tapped," he claimed.
The government is not only polarising the country, but also dividing parties in the opposition and intimidating them by using the CBI and the ED, the senior Congress leader said.
He said: "You have divided Shias and Sunnis. Now, you are dividing husband and wife. You cannot polarise the nation. ... What kind of division are you involved in? Why are you intimidating the minority community who are victims of fear psychosis?"
"You should spare some section. We don't want this New India. You have polarised it. Return us India of Gandhi where no fear existed," Azad said.
Expressing concern over the Kashmir situation, he attacked the government for not framing any clear policy for the troubled state.
He claimed that the largest number of ceasefire violations have occured during the NDA government's tenure. Not only civilians, but soldiers and higher rank army officials have been killed.
Azad said the dialogue and "hot-pursuit" in the state cannot go hand in hand.
Stating that the recently announced national health insurance scheme is another "jumla" (rhetoric) of this government, Azad said it will only benefit insurance firms and not the ordinary citizens.
"The examples of the US and UK are there. They spend 15 per cent of the budget on health. But all reports say insurance companies benefit, not the common man. I don't know how our people are going to benefit," he said.
Attacking the government for being insensitive towards farmers, Azad said the government making "false promises" of doubling income by 2022, which cannot be implemented with the current budget allocation to the farm sector.
"You cannot achieve farm growth of 10-12 per cent even if you rule next 50 years. You cannot invest Rs 6.4 lakh crore. There is no chance of doubling farmers income. Why do you make such promises which cannot be fulfilled," he asked.
Azad said the average growth in the last three years has been 1.9 per cent per annum only. Moreover, meagre budget been allocated to the agri-ministry for the next fiscal, he added.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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