New Delhi: The Congress party has finalized an aggressive legislative strategy to confront the government on several front-page controversies during the upcoming Monsoon Session of Parliament, scheduled to run from July 20 to August 13. Following a high-level meeting of the Congress Parliamentary Strategy Group held at the New Delhi residence of CPP Chairperson Sonia Gandhi, senior party leader Jairam Ramesh detailed a list of public interest issues that the opposition will push to debate on the floor of the House.
Speaking at a press conference, Ramesh emphasized that the Congress intends to corner the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) over what he termed a major scandal involving the theft of financial donations earmarked for the Ayodhya Ram Temple. He further noted that fresh revelations regarding financial discrepancies are surfacing on a daily basis, characterizing the situation as a serious betrayal of public faith.
The opposition also plans to challenge the government on systemic failures within the national education framework, spearheaded by the widespread paper leak scandals affecting the NEET-UG examination. Pointing to recent public rallies led by Rahul Gandhi in Dehradun, Ramesh stated that the party remains in direct contact with student groups protesting recurring evaluation disruptions, citing fresh paper leak incidents in Dehradun and an earlier occurrence in Kota. Additionally, Congress will demand an extensive parliamentary discussion regarding the alleged “E-20” ethanol procurement scam, asserting that senior BJP leaders and their family members are directly implicated in the fraudulent policy rollouts.
Turning to international relations, the Congress leader highlighted a critical need for an open debate on India’s foreign policy directions. The party intends to question the administration regarding deteriorating security dynamics in West Asia, changing geopolitical equations with the United States, ongoing boundary tensions with China, and America’s evolving diplomatic cooperation with Pakistan, which Ramesh termed a major shock to domestic foreign interests.
Ramesh expressed deep skepticism over the productivity of the upcoming session, accusing the government of treating mandatory all-party meetings as a mere formality. He stated that while central ministers take notes during floor strategy discussions, the ruling administration routinely bypasses opposition demands for public debates in order to forcefully ram its legislative bills through the house.