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YSRCP slams coalition govt for denying opposition status

ANI February 26, 2025 173 views

The YSRCP is raising serious concerns about the Andhra Pradesh coalition government's refusal to grant them principal opposition status. MLC Lella Appi Reddy argues that this denial undermines democratic principles and the opposition's crucial role in governance. He claims the coalition is suppressing public discourse and avoiding accountability by blocking YSRCP's legitimate representation. The party views this as a direct challenge to democratic norms and transparency in state politics.

"Our fight is to uphold democracy and ensure people's voices are heard" - Lella Appi Reddy, YSRCP MLC
Tadepalli, February 26: YSRCP MLC Lella Appi Reddy criticised the coalition government for its authoritarian stance in "denying" YSRCP principal opposition status in the Andhra Pradesh Assembly, a release said.

Key Points

1

- YSRCP argues for principal opposition status based on democratic principles

2

Coalition government blocking opposition's democratic role

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Citing Parliament Act of 1977 for recognition

Reddy accused the government of suppressing the opposition's voice, undermining democracy, and showing blatant disregard for democratic norms.

Speaking to the media, he accused the government of "suppressing the opposition's voice" and "undermining democracy" by "refusing to recognize YSRCP as the principal opposition", calling it a "blatant disregard for democratic norms".

He emphasized that principal opposition status is a responsibility, not a privilege, which ensures time to address public issues in the Assembly.

With three out of four Assembly parties in the ruling coalition, Reddy argued that YSRCP, as the sole remaining party, deserves the principal opposition status.

Condemning the coalition's "venomous propaganda" for misrepresenting this role, he cited the Parliament Act of 1977, which mandates recognizing the principal opposition regardless of seat count. With three of four Assembly parties in the ruling coalition, he argued that YSRCP, as the sole remaining party, deserves the status, the release said.

He accused the government of lying in the Assembly, blocking discussions on public grievances, and fearing YSRCP's scrutiny amid rising discontent over unfulfilled promises.

Appi Reddy accused the government of "lying" in the Assembly and "blocking" discussion on public grievances, fearing YSRCP's scrutiny amid "rising discontent" over unfulfilled promises, Group-2 unemployment issues, chilli farmers' struggles, and electricity charge hikes.

He linked the denial of status to the "coalition's inability to answer questions and hide governance failures".

Reddy linked the denial of status to the coalition's inability to answer questions and hide governance failures. He highlighted YSRCP's effective opposition role in the Legislative Council, raising issues like vice-chancellors' forced resignations and falsehoods in the Governor's address.

Reddy emphasized the opposition's vital democratic role, warning that unilateral governance without accountability is dictatorial. He challenged the coalition's numerical excuse, suggesting that Janasena exit the coalition if numbers were the criterion.

He concluded that YSRCP's "fight is to uphold democracy" and "ensure people's voices are heard".

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