Lingden says that even if the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) wins a single majority, the government will not last for five years.
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Rastriya Prajatantra Party (RPP) Chairman Rajendra Lingden has said that the path to becoming a party is now open, saying that the ‘Ainjeru’ has fallen off on its own. Addressing the inaugural ceremony of the RPP’s Gorkha district convention on Friday, Lingden said that people who did not become candidates during the elections and did not even go to seek votes for candidates should not feel sad when they leave the party.
‘Those who were working as Ainjeru, the Ainjeru that grew on their feet, did not allow them to wear shoes, made it difficult to walk, and cut off and threw away the flesh of their bodies, have fallen off on their own,’ he said, ‘You do not need to worry, this is not a fake and reassuring statement, now the path to becoming a RPP is open.’
He alleged that although the party leaders and workers will work for the elections, the leaders who left the party were saying that the party should not be allowed to become a national party in the elections. "If those who say that they will not even run for office, will not even vote, and that this party should not be allowed to become a national party have left the party, why should we feel sad?" he added. "Where were the people you saw in the election? They came to seek votes. If we have to mention them by name, where did Dhawal Shamsher go to seek votes in his district?"
Targeting the movement that took place in Chaitra last year, Lingden said that the atmosphere created across the country by making an 87-year-old person of retirement age the coordinator of the movement has also been disrupted.
Lingden has also claimed that the RSVP-led government will not last for 5 years. He said that it is wrong to say that politics will stabilize if some political parties lose elections and another political party wins elections. "Some people are under the illusion that a political party has won a two-thirds majority, who will do what for 5 years?" However, what should not be forgotten in Nepal's politics is "If a party wins a single majority in a parliamentary election, it does not last for 5 years," he said. "Even now, there is no certainty that a party will remain in power for 5 years just because it has won a majority. There is also no room for reassurance from the government's initial actions." He said that although it is not time for the party that lost the election to react so quickly, the government's initial signs do not look good.
