First Quote Added
April 10, 2026
Latest Quote Added
"The fact that he chose to belittle the Prime Minister is not surprising, in fact expected... After failing to connect with the people of India, Mr Gandhi chooses a platform of convenience for beating his political opponents.... Indian democracy gives opportunity to merit and is not beholden to dynasty... A failed dynast today chose to speak about his failed political journey."
"When a man is touching 50 and has never had any productive job in his life, he cannot elicit respect from me as an individual... If you stand in the capital of India and say you support âBharat ke tukde hongeâ (India will be broken into pieces), I donât have an iota of respect for such individuals."
"Tradition dictates you should first win from Raebareli before challenging for top!"
"I have spent more than 32 years in the Congress and when the Ram Mandir decision came, after getting advice from his wellwisher in America, Rahul Gandhi in a meeting with his close aides said that after the Congress government is formed, they will form a superpower commission and will overturn the Ram Mandir decision just like Rajiv Gandhi overturned the Shah Bano decision."
"The Shehzada of the Congress said recently that our Rajas and Maharajas back in the day were ruthless. They snatched or took away the humble assets of the poor at their whim. The Shehzada insulted the revered Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj and Rani Chennamma, whose good governance and patriotism still fill us with national pride and honour. Does he not have any knowledge of the contribution of the royal family of Mysuru who we all regard very highly and are proud of? ... The Shehzadaâs was carefully calibrated, on purpose, to appease a certain vote bank. He did not utter a single word on the atrocities committed by the Nawabs, Nizams, Sultans, and Badhshahs (on their peasants). The Congress seems to have forgotten the grave excesses perpetrated by (Mughal emperor) Aurangzeb, who destroyed thousands of our temples... The Benaras Hindu University (BHU) could not have been established without the help of the king, who ruled the city back in the day. Maharaja Gaekwad of Baroda had helped Baba Saheb Ambedkar pursue his higher studies abroad. The Congressâ Shehzada knows nothing about this and is making public statements that are aimed at advancing the partyâs vote bank politics. The Congress is in an alliance with parties that glorify Aurangzeb. They donât talk about kings who destroyed our pilgrimage sites, looted them, killed our people while also slaughtering livestock... Since the Congress came to power in Karnataka, the law and order situation in the state has been on a free-fall. The incident in Hubballi (the daylight murder of a sitting Congress corporatorâs daughter) shook the countryâs conscience. When the bereaved family sought action, the ruling Congress, yet again, preferred appeasement over justice. They do not value the lives of our daughters like Neha (Hiremath). All they care about is their vote bank."
"Singh and I had developed a warm and productive relationship. While he could be cautious in foreign policy, unwilling to get out too far ahead of an Indian bureaucracy that was historically suspicious of U.S. intentions, our time together confirmed my initial impression of him as a man of uncommon wisdom and decencyâŚ. What I couldnât tell was whether Singhâs rise to power represented the future of Indiaâs democracy or merely an aberration.... In fact, he owed his position to Sonia GandhiâŚmore than one political observer believed that sheâd chosen Singh precisely because as an elderly Sikh with no national political base, he posed no threat to her forty-year-old son, Rahul, whom she was grooming to take over the Congress Party... He feared that rising anti-Muslim sentiment had strengthened the influence of Indiaâs main opposition party, the Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)... In the dim light, he (Singh) looked frail, older than his seventy-eight years, and as we drove off I wondered what would happen when he left office. Would the baton be successfully passed to Rahul, fulfilling the destiny laid out by his mother and preserving the Congress Partyâs dominance over the âdivisive nationalismâ touted by the BJP?"
"Rahul Gandhi has a nervous, unformed quality about him, as if he were a student whoâd done the coursework and was eager to impress the teacher but deep down lacked either the aptitude or the passion to master the subject."
"It took this election campaign for ordinary Indians to notice what was going on. They noticed because Modi told voters that they were choosing between a âkaamdaarâ and a ânaamdaarâ. A working man and a prince. It did not help that the ânaamdaarâ then mocked Modi and made fun of everything about him. Modiâs âhugplomacyâ, âGabbar Singh Taxâ, demonetisation. Modiâs demonetisation, he said, was done to steal their money and give it to his rich friends. The countryâs Chowkidar, he said too many times, was a âchorâ. He forgot that he was demeaning not just a political opponent but the Prime Minister of India. Ordinary voters were appalled that the heir to Indiaâs most powerful political dynasty should talk this way. He sounded arrogant, entitled and insulting and reminded them that there were too many political heirs in Indian politics"
"In the sycophancy department she surpassed her own high standards when she began to recount Rahul Gandhiâs virtues. Even I, who knew her eternal need to be counted in Delhiâs highest echelons of political power, nearly fell off my chair when she said, âDo you know I believe that Rahul Gandhi has the best of Rajiv in him and the best of Sanjay?â I recount this remark here to draw attention to how much support dynastic democracy has in the drawing rooms of Lutyensâ Delhi. And it is not just socialites who endorse this distorted form of democracy but bureaucrats, journalists and men and women who like to think of themselves as public intellectuals."
"The interview was an unmitigated disaster. The first problem was that he chose to give his first formal interview in English and not in Hindi. This strengthened the impression that he represented the privileged denizens of Delhi more than the people of India. The second problem was that of all of Indian televisionâs English anchors Arnab had been chosen. Arnab has made belligerence the defining characteristic of his anchoring style, and once he gets a victim into his studio rarely lets him get away with vague answers. Nobody seemed to have prepared him for the kind of questions he would be asked. So he spent most of his answers talking in abstractions. Democracy is about processes, he said, and Rahul Gandhi is sitting here because he wants to empower the people. And most puzzling of all was his repeated assertion that âthe systemâ had destroyed his grandmother and his father and would probably destroy him. As Arnabâs questions became tougher and more direct Rahulâs answers became more abstract. When I finished watching the interview I watched it again on YouTube and found myself marvelling at how many times he repeated that âthe systemâ was what he was in politics to change. It was as if nobody had told him that âthe systemâ for ten years had been a government that was controlled by his mother with an iron hand. And that âthe systemâ had been created by his great-grandfather and perpetuated by his grandmother and father after that. By the time I finished watching this interview for the second time I was certain that the Congress would lose the election with or without a Modi wave."
"Responding to the Ambassador's query about Lashkar-e-Taiba's activities in the region and immediate threat to India, Gandhi said there was evidence of some support for the group among certain elements in India's indigenous Muslim community. However, Gandhi warned, the bigger threat may be the growth of radicalized Hindu groups, which create religious tensions and political confrontations with the Muslim community."
"The surprising thing is that the so called defenders of democracy like US and Europe seem to just be oblivious of the fact that a huge chunk of the democratic model has come undone in India. While the opposition is fighting that battle, US and Europe are not doing enough to restore the democracy in India. The inaction may be because of the trade and money they are getting."
"People keep saying I am shy. Oh, heâs so shy. The media says it all the time. I am not at all shy. I am not reluctant. I am an extrovert. I am like that all the time. You can ask my friends. I am the one who talks the most."
"There is fear of failure here. People keep saying what if this goes wrong, what if that doesnât work. Every time I want to do something, there is this fear that it may go wrong. It comes up each time."
"I donât ask questions in Parliament because I like to think things through. Just look around at the questions that are asked in Parliament, and youâll know why I donât ask questions. I mean look at them. Is that the kind of stuff you want me to ask?"
"It is one bathroom lesson I havenât forgotten. That is the arrogance you have to deal with. When I take life this way, I stop thinking that the other guy is a joker. I realise I am the joker."
"(After terrorist attacks in Mumbai) Terrorism is impossible to be stopped at all time. We will stop 99% of the attacks; 1% of the attacks will get through. You feel US has stopped all terrorist attacks? US is currently involved in Afghanistan and Iraq, where there are attacks every single day. On them. Not in US, but on them. The war has moved."
"What is happening to human resources in Punjab. 7 out of 10 youth have the problem of drugs."
"India is the Saudi Arabia of human resources for the 21st century. The power that we used to get from oil in 20th century, we will get it from people like you in 21st century."
"There are people doing yoga in New York, dancing around, thatâs the power of India. You go to a nightclub somewhere in Spain and thereâs Amitabh Bachchan on the screen there, dancing around. Thatâs the power of India. Thatâs the power of Indian people."
"In India, we have a concept of caste. It has a concept of escape velocity. If one belongs to a backward caste and wants to attain success then one needs an escape velocity to attain that success. Dalits in this country need the escape velocity of Jupiter to attain success."