In separate letters to BJP President J.P. Nadda and Congress President Mallikarjun Kharge, the Election Commission (EC) on Wednesday asked the party heads to direct their star campaigners to maintain decorum in their speeches as they address public meetings during the ongoing Lok Sabha elections. While the EC asked the BJP to refrain from any campaign methods along âreligious or communalâ lines and not make any speeches and statements which âmay divide the societyâ, it asked Congress leaders not to make statements which give false impression that âthe Constitution of India may be abolishedâ or âpotentially divisive statementsâ regarding the socio-economic composition of the armed forces. The narratives portrayed in the speeches of the star campaigners could be damaging beyond the election period, the EC said. The EC letter to Mr. Nadda took note the BJP Presidentâs response to the April 25 notice to him on a complaint made against Prime Minister Narendra Modiâs speech in Banswara, Rajasthan â Mr. Modi had referred to Muslims as âinfiltratorsâ and âpeople with more childrenâ. Congress had called his speech âcommunalâ. It must also be noted that the EC had issued a similar notice on model code of conduct violations by Congress leader Rahul Gandhi and Mr. Kharge himself on the same day. The EC also noted that Mr. Nadda had made no explicit denial of speeches made by its star campaigners in the response. It termed his defence as âuntenableâ. Mr. Nadda had responded to the EC letter on May 13 after seeking two extensions. The letters sent on Wednesday, however, do not name either Mr. Modi or Mr. Gandhi or Mr. Kharge. The notices being issued to the respective party presidents, instead of the leaders directly, was also unprecedented. Overall, these measures might give an appearance of impartiality by assuming a false parity, but that is not enough, according to The Hindu editorial. The Hinduâs Editorials Setting the bar: On the Election Commission of India Justified balance: On the ICC move against Israel, Hamas The Hinduâs Daily Quiz Where is the ancient Thathayagunta Gangamma temple, known for the âGanga Jataraâ folk festival, located? Anantapur Mangalagiri Chittoor Tirupati To know the answer and to play the full quiz, click here. [logo] Editor's Pick 23 May 2024 [The Hindu logo] [EP Logo] Editor's Pick 23 May 2024 In the Editor's Pick newsletter, The Hindu explains why a story was important enough to be carried on the front page of today's edition of our newspaper. [View in browser]( [More newsletters]( Shun divisive speeches, Election Commission tells BJP, Congress In separate letters to BJP President J.P. Nadda and Congress President Mallikarjun Kharge, the Election Commission (EC) on Wednesday asked the party heads to direct their star campaigners to maintain decorum in their speeches as they address public meetings during the ongoing Lok Sabha elections. While the EC asked the BJP to refrain from any campaign methods along âreligious or communalâ lines and not make any speeches and statements which âmay divide the societyâ, it asked Congress leaders not to make statements which give false impression that âthe Constitution of India may be abolishedâ or âpotentially divisive statementsâ regarding the socio-economic composition of the armed forces. The narratives portrayed in the speeches of the star campaigners could be damaging beyond the election period, the EC said. The EC letter to Mr. Nadda took note the BJP Presidentâs response to the April 25 notice to him on a complaint made against Prime Minister Narendra Modiâs speech in Banswara, Rajasthan â Mr. Modi had referred to Muslims as âinfiltratorsâ and âpeople with more childrenâ. Congress had called his speech âcommunalâ. It must also be noted that the EC had issued a similar notice on model code of conduct violations by Congress leader Rahul Gandhi and Mr. Kharge himself on the same day. The EC also noted that Mr. Nadda had made no explicit denial of speeches made by its star campaigners in the response. It termed his defence as âuntenableâ. Mr. Nadda had responded to the EC letter on May 13 after seeking two extensions. The letters sent on Wednesday, however, do not name either Mr. Modi or Mr. Gandhi or Mr. Kharge. The notices being issued to the respective party presidents, instead of the leaders directly, was also unprecedented. Overall, these measures might give an appearance of impartiality by assuming a false parity, but that is not enough, according to [The Hindu editorial](. The Hinduâs Editorials [Arrow][Setting the bar: On the Election Commission of India](
[Arrow][Justified balance: On the ICC move against Israel, Hamas]( The Hinduâs Daily Quiz Where is the ancient Thathayagunta Gangamma temple, known for the âGanga Jataraâ folk festival, located? - Anantapur
- Mangalagiri
- Chittoor
- Tirupati To know the answer and to play the full quiz, [click here](. [Sign up for free]( Todayâs Best Reads [[If the BJP puts democracy in jail, then democracy will have to be run from jail: Arvind Kejriwal] If the BJP puts democracy in jail, then democracy will have to be run from jail: Arvind Kejriwal](
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