Bharat Rashtra Samiti President and Telangana State Chief Minister K Chandrashekhar Rao said that a big change in the political arena of the country is on the way, and Maharashtra state has the opportunity to act as a catalyst for transformation.
Inaugurating a workshop in Nanded for training party functionaries from all 288 assembly constituencies in Maharashtra, he said Maharashtra had been on the frontlines of the fight for the sake of the country many times. It is high time for the state to take on the task of driving the necessary change in the country.
In the morning, Chandrashekhar Rao flew from Hyderabad to Nanded to kick off a two-day workshop organized by the Maharashtra unit of the Bharat Rashtra Samithi.
He urged party members at all levels to be action-oriented and persistent in their efforts to reach out to the public as part of the month-long membership drive set to begin on May 21. He stated that the BRS government succeeded where other governments had failed, and that the Telangana model is now the most desired form of development in the country.
He stated that the BRS’s call will be felt in all states, including Chhattigarh, Madhya Pradesh, and Punjab. The party would not back down until the farmers received a fair deal.
Political parties that ruled the country had made extravagant promises in the past, but they had failed to deliver. It is entirely up to the people to put an end to the 70 years of lip service.
The BRS’s deep inroads into Maharashtra provided an opportunity for new leadership to emerge. Successful leaders will not come down from the sky. People must seize the opportunity to shape themselves as leaders. They must continue to be bound for the legislative bodies. Change yourself from “Darakhast Dene Wale se Darakhast Lene Wale”, he insisted.
He urged BRS workers to form committees in each village in Maharashtra and urged volunteers to make full use of the social media platforms to spread the ideology of the BRS. He stated that Telangana, which is ruled by BRS, is now first in many fields. Telangana experienced severe drought, but thanks to the BRS’s policies, the state produced the highest quantum of paddy.
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