Overview
- Kharge reiterated that Congress had banned the RSS before and pledged to do so again if returned to power, branding the organisation anti-national under Ambedkar’s definition of communal hatred.
- He accused the RSS and BJP of promoting a 'one nation, one religion' agenda and warned that a supermajority could be used to amend the Constitution.
- Kharge questioned the RSS’s opaque financing, citing office constructions valued at Rs 300–400 crore and vowing to send the Enforcement Directorate and income-tax authorities to probe its funds.
- He challenged the RSS’s historical legitimacy by pointing to its absence from the Dandi March, ia MoIndia Movement and early opposition to the Constitution in its Organiser magazine.
- Kharge highlighted the contradiction of BJP leaders opposing 'socialism' and 'secularism' in India’s Preamble while those principles remain enshrined in the BJP’s own party constitution.