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Rahul Gandhi's love-inspired message, his door-to-door campaign, and his struggle with the AAP rather than the BJP are how the Congress will resurrect itself in Delhi

 Rahul Gandhi's love-inspired message, his door-to-door campaign, and his struggle with the AAP rather than the BJP are how the Congress will resurrect itself in Delhi


AAP vs. Congress: The Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) was the target of criticism from the Congress, which claimed that while the party received 13% of the vote in the Gujarat assembly elections, Arvind Kejriwal had not made a single trip there in the previous six months.


In Delhi. The Delhi Congress will mobilise its local supporters in the nation's capital before to the 2024 Lok Sabha elections with a focus on door-to-door engagement with voters. This information was provided on Saturday by an official. 


Deepak Babaria, the recently appointed All India Congress Committee (AICC) in-charge of Delhi Congress, held a meeting of party members, office holders, and leaders, and it was at this meeting that this choice was made. In the meeting, he also approved two resolutions—political and organisational.


Babaria added, speaking to party members, "The Congress will spread Rahul the call of Gandhi of love as his fight against the politics of hate resound through the country." We'll concentrate on going door to door with folks and enlist more neighbourhood activists in the capital.


Babaria, a Gujarati Congress leader, officially assumed leadership of the Delhi Congress on Saturday at Rajiv Bhavan. Taking aim at the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP), Babaria said that although the party received 13% of the vote in the Gujarat assembly elections, Arvind Kejriwal had not made a single trip there in the previous six months. The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and the AAP, he claimed, were two sides of the same coin.


Following the conference, a resolution was passed declaring that "Congress workers undertake to fight jointly with full force against the corrupt BJP-ruled central government and the Aam Aadmi Party, which will be contesting in the 2024 parliamentary elections." The opposition parties' ability to work together after meeting in Patna a few days ago has obviously been damaged by the suggestion.


At a gathering of opposition parties that Nitish Kumar, the chief minister of Bihar, hosted in Patna, more than 32 representatives from more than a dozen different parties came to an agreement to take on the BJP as a united front in the 2024 Lok Sabha elections.

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