28 November,2022 11:21 AM IST | Mumbai | Noman Siddiqui
MP Sanjay Raut
The comments of Maharashtra Governor Bhagat Singh Koshyari's on Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj have sparked a backlash from across the political spectrum.
Speaking about the remark made by the Governor, in an exclusive interview with Mid-Day, Shiv Sena (Uddhav Balasaheb Thackeray) leader and Rajya Sabha MP Sanjay Raut said a person who disrespected Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj is still sitting in the Raj Bhavan.
Raut said, "It is shameful that the chief minister, the deputy chief minister and BJP are backing up his remark. Had we been in the government and someone would have said this about Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj, these people would have come to the streets and protested against him. But they are silent today. We want the Governor to be impeached."
"The cabinet should pass a proposal to condemn the Governor and impeach him. This proposal should be sent to the centre. If the cabinet doesn't do it, Shiv Sena will do it," he further added.
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Raut stepped out of jail on November 9, after a special court granted him bail in a money laundering case. He spent 100 days in jail. He was arrested by the ED related to a money laundering case in the Patra Chawl redevelopment project.
Speaking about the politics involved in using central agencies, Sanjay Raut said, "Political scenarios change, politicians change, ideologies change but no party has downgraded itself so much in politics. No party has involved the ED or troubled a politician's family for political gain. But it has started now."
He added, "We used to fight in the parliament, in the legislative assembly, in corporations, in elections, on streets as this is the battle of ideologies. Democracy doesn't have a place for personal vengeance. This is the country of Mahatma Gandhi. How did the feeling of destroying someone's political or public life enter a country that has Gandhi's, Sardar Patel's, and Pandit Nehru's ideologies? A person like me can handle such situations but a lot of people kneel down in such situations, leave a party or form new governments. What kind of politics is going on in this country?"