KCR conducting consultations to revamp ministries, TRS party
By Sameer| Published: 26th December 2020 10:21 am IST
By Mohammed Hussain Ahmed
Hyderabad: In the wake of Telangana Rashtriya Samithi’s poor performance and his return from a tour of New Delhi, Chief Minister K Chandrasekhar Rao is focusing his attention to revamp the party.
According to a report, “the CM is conducting meetings with the party’s senior leaders and the Ministers to find out ways to bring buoyancy in the party. According to the reports KCR is considering to make big organizational changes to strengthen the party. He is also trying to make changes in his current government.”
New Delhi: The farmers’ protests have seen a redrawing of positions by political parties, with many of BJP’s official and unofficial allies breaking ranks to support the farmers.
After SAD, BJP’s oldest ally, walked out of NDA over the farm laws, the party’s Rajasthan’s ally Hanuman Beniwal, who heads Rashtriya Loktantrik Party, came out in support of farmers and resigned from three House panels in protest.
The Jat strongman and Nagaur MP announced that he would decide on quitting NDA on December 26, when he plans to march towards Delhi with two lakh supporters. He has been supporting the agitation and demanding that the laws be withdrawn.
December 14, 2020
There was no end in sight to the deadlock between the agitating farmers, demanding repeal of the three contentious agriculture laws and the centre, which was not ready to roll them back.
The peasants threatened to intensify their two-week-old agitation across the country after several rounds of negotiations with the centre failed to produce a positive outcome.
The farmers rejected a proposal to make some amendments in the three agri-laws to address the concerns expressed by the peasants saying only a withdrawal would pacify them.
By end of November, thousands of farmers from various states laid siege of the national capital in biting cold to push their demand saying the three controversial agriculture laws were anti-peasant and pro-corporate.