Secretary General Bhusal's emphasis on reorganization to create new hope and confidence in the people, to strengthen the democratic process
Ghanshyam Bhusal, General Secretary of United Samajwadi Party, has put forward a proposal to reorganize the party, policy and leadership. Submitting a written proposal at the central officials' meeting on Thursday, he expressed the opinion that the reorganization should start from his own party.
General secretary Bhusal concluded that it is not possible to go to the people without reorganizing all the parties. "Let's get ready to hold a party-wide discussion on this matter," he suggested, "If we put this main issue under the carpet and put it before other issues, the world will hate us." "The first condition today to advance politics based on the country's transformational policies and programs and to save the country from counter-revolutionary threats is the reorganization of the current parties, the reorganization of policies and leadership," he said. Bhusal is of the opinion that the political complications that arose after the Gen-G movement gave an opportunity for new construction. "In an odd situation, the president has made an agreement with the road." In that process, the limits of the constitution have been touched. We have to strengthen the democratic process and make it fail while going to the elections,'' his proposal states.
Secretary General Bhusal says that since the political party is the destroyer of the state in democracy, it is necessary to make a good party for building a good and strong state. "We are a political party to blame for today's ineptitude. But we should not try to escape from this responsibility,'' in his opinion, 'it is impossible to imagine strengthening the democratic process and facing elections by keeping these parties in their current state. "If we fail to create new hope and trust in the common people, the democratic process will go in the direction of non-restoration," said Bhusal, "Indolent communities that do not want to come out of the state of self-infatuation are falling behind, shrinking, and disappearing at the pace of history." Today, we are standing in front of the ruins of the state, politics and organization that we have built.'
General Secretary Bhusal's analysis is that the group gathering around the mayor of Kathmandu, Balendra (Balen) Shah, is expressing dissatisfaction and anger against the government. "Such anger was naturally concentrated against the Prime Minister KP Sharma Oli, other prominent leaders, the government and the state." Bhusal believes that the anger of the common people was raised after the RSVP organized the commentary of "old party, old leader" nationwide and challenged the social dominance of the Congress and the leftists, especially the UML.
After the exit from power, the Maoists also wanted to defeat the coalition government of UML and Congress and to participate in the government in one way or another. In this situation, the government banned social media. After the sudden attack on the multi-faceted place of entertainment, communication, establishing contact, studying, showing one's identity, expressing anger, spending solitude and earning, there was chaos among the youth," he mentioned in the written proposal, "The demand to lift the ban on social media spread everywhere. It was at this point that the issue of corruption was added to their demand. In this background, the protest rally on 23 August attracted the attention and support of all sections of the society.
