admin
admin
The ruling YSR Congress is getting ready for its prestigious election meeting to be held on January 27 at Bheemili in Visakhapatnam. This would be the first meeting of the party in the series where Chief Minister and YSR Congress president Y S Jagan Mohan Reddy would address the party workers.
The party plans to have regional level meetings with the party activists across the state. The meetings would be held for every five districts, the party announced recently. Jagan Mohan Reddy wants to give personal touch to every worker in the party ahead of the 2024 general elections to the state Assembly.
The personal touch of the chief minister is set to elate the rank and file who would be working for the party during the elections. They have worked hard in the last election and the party had won 151 Assembly seats out of 175 seats.
This time, the chief minister is going for the polls with a slogan of why not 175. He said this at Kuppam Assembly constituency where the party had won all panchayat and municipal elections in Kuppam Assembly constituency area three years ago.
Jagan Mohan Reddy is encouraging the rank and file of the party to become active for the elections. He has a big list of the welfare schemes that his government had implemented in the last five years. He wants the party workers to visit every beneficiary and remind them of the benefit that they have received from this government. He is also asking the party workers to explain how the opposition parties have campaigned against the welfare schemes comparing the state with Sri Lanka.
Minister for Industries Gudivada Amarnath had visited the meeting venue at Bheemili and expressed satisfaction over the arrangements being made at the venue. He said that the party had invited the workers from the North Andhra region for the meeting.
The minister said that the meeting was expected to be a big hit with the rank and file taking part. The party workers would certainly go back with sweet memories and the commitment to ensure the party’s victory in the coming elections.