Thursday, June 25, 2026
ADVT 
India

People will choose next CM, says Sidhu

Darpan News Desk IANS, 11 Jan, 2022 12:00 PM
  • People will choose next CM, says Sidhu

Chandigarh, Jan 11 (IANS) To position himself as the chief ministerial candidate of the Congress in Punjab, state unit chief Navjot Singh Sidhu on Tuesday said it is the people who will choose the next Chief Minister of the state.

Unveiling the first set of plans in his Punjab Model with focus on resurrection of Punjab, Sidhu, in the absence of Chief Minister Charanjit Singh Channi and his Cabinet colleagues, told the media here: "Punjab Model is people's model, an effort to give a roadmap to return power to people."

To counter powerful 'mafia model', which has power to even stop the notification of Cabinet passed resolution, he said a model is needed to redistribute state resources and give power back to rightful beneficiaries.

Explaining about Punjab Model, cricketer-turned-politician Sidhu, who often boasts of his proximity with the Gandhi family -- Rahul and Priyanka -- talked about setting up state-run corporations in liquor, mining, transport, cable television and river water to rejuvenate state's financial resources and check revenue pilferages in the next five years, if the Congress returns to power in the Assembly elections slated on February 14.

He asserted that his 'Punjab Model 2022' will create not only more jobs but will also generate revenue and plug revenue pilferages.

He was categorically clear in saying that, "Punjab is not the property of an individual."

Slamming the Shiromani Akali Dal chief Sukhbir Badal, Sidhu said: "Why do Badals have monopoly in buses and cable business? In the past five years, the state has a loss of Rs 5,000 crore owing to their monopoly. We will break the monopoly. It can be recovered too. The end objective is to empower local operators and give cheap cable to people."

According to Sidhu, Badal's Fastway cable network has 70-80 per cent TV connections in the state and the data it is sharing with government is less than two-third. In 2007, the Badals made laws to protect its monopoly.

"So is state's transport policy that needs to end the mafia of the Badals," said Sidhu, who reiterated that it is important to give power back to people of Punjab.

He often accused the Badals and former chief minister Capt Amarinder Singh, when he was at the state's helm, of stalling a law proposed by him which would have ended Fastway's monopoly.

"Today Punjab needs a governance reform which translates public issues into policies with a poverty reduction strategy," Sidhu, whose party's government is going to the polls for re-election, stressed.

Picking holes in his own government, Sidhu said Punjab Model will have a government-run sand mining corporation in the state that has 1,300-km long riverbed with 102 sites and the illegal mining is so rampant.

The 'resurrect' Punjab will run its own liquor vends and distilleries to boost excise revenue.

"This will earn revenue for the crash-strapped state government on the pattern of Tamil Nadu," he said.

MORE India ARTICLES

Punjab Minister Advises Navjot Sidhu To Apologise To Families Of Soldiers

Navjot Sidhu was widely criticised for hugging the Pakistan Army chief during his visit to Pakistan to attend the swearing-in ceremony of Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan.

Punjab Minister Advises Navjot Sidhu To Apologise To Families Of Soldiers

In Germany, Rahul Gandhi Blames Unemployment For Lynchings

In Germany, Rahul Gandhi Blames Unemployment For Lynchings
In his address in Germany's Hamburg, Rahul Gandhi traced the creation of ISIS to warn against a similar situation at home if people are excluded from the development process.

In Germany, Rahul Gandhi Blames Unemployment For Lynchings

'Indian Women Don't Want To Move Out Of City After Marriage'

'Indian Women Don't Want To Move Out Of City After Marriage'
Indian women are no longer willing to uproot their life after marriage, reveals a matchmaking service user data.

'Indian Women Don't Want To Move Out Of City After Marriage'

Here's How Much Longer You'd Live If There Was No Air Pollution In India

Here's How Much Longer You'd Live If There Was No Air Pollution In India
If air pollution were removed as a risk for death, people in the world could live at least a year longer and in India, which is battling a severe air pollution, the benefit would be even more -- about 1.5 years, says study.

Here's How Much Longer You'd Live If There Was No Air Pollution In India

Woman Arrested For Posing As Top TV Executive To Dupe People In Delhi

Woman Arrested For Posing As Top TV Executive To Dupe People In Delhi
Payel Samuel approached Ravi Patel on June 9 by giving reference of his acquaintance and posing as the vice president of an English news channel, police said.

Woman Arrested For Posing As Top TV Executive To Dupe People In Delhi

WhatsApp Rejects India's Demand For Message Traceability

WhatsApp Rejects India's Demand For Message Traceability
The government has been pushing WhatsApp to find a technology solution to trace the origin of messages, a move it believes can help curb horrific crimes like mob-lynching emanating from fake news.

WhatsApp Rejects India's Demand For Message Traceability