Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Wednesday (Feb 7) replied to the Motion of Thanks to the President's address in Rajya Sabha, the upper house, during the ongoing Budget Session of Parliament.
"I thank the President for her address (in the Parliament)," says Modi while replying to the Motion of Thanks.
Unlike the previous UPA administration, the BJP-led Centre, according to PM Modi, prioritises the people over partisan gain. We provided LPG connections to 25 crore families nationwide for this reason, he emphasized.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Thursday said "one person is proving too much for so many" and that more muck is raised by the parties opposed to the BJP, the more the party's symbol lotus will bloom.
Updated Feb 08, 2021 | 12:45 IST
The Lok Sabha has witnessed several scenes of disruption during the ongoing Budget Session of the Parliament, over the farm laws. PM Modi (file photo)  |  Photo Credit: ANI
New Delhi: PM Narendra Modi replied to the debate on Motion of Thanks on President Ram Nath Kovind s address in the Rajya Sabha on Monday and said that a new breed of people called Andolan Jivi has come into existence in the country. They can be spotted wherever there is a protest, be it agitation by lawyers, students, or labourers, explicitly or implicitly. They cannot live without
Dubbed As ‘Third-World’, India Is Now Helping World With Vaccines: PM Modi Today, the world appreciates India s efforts in saving humanity. We should be proud of it, said PM Modi Grab Outlook Web Bureau 2021-02-08T11:15:03+05:30 Dubbed As ‘Third-World’, India Is Now Helping World With Vaccines: PM Modi outlookindia.com 2021-02-08T14:39:29+05:30
Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Monday replied to the Motion of Thanks on the President’s address during the ongoing Budget Session of Parliament. He said it would have been nice had everyone had listened to President Kovind’s address.
PM Modi slammed those calling agitating Sikh farmers names, saying it won t do the country any good as he went on to appeal to the protesting farmers to withdraw their over two-month-long stir and give the new agriculture reform laws a chance.