Spelling out the Congress' stand on key bills, including GST, during an interaction with girl students at a prestigious college here, Gandhi also made a stinging attack on Prime Minister Narendra Modi, charging that it was "much worse" than a "suit-boot-ki-sarkar" with the economy in the doldrums.
"Do we want the GST. Are we ready to compromise on GST. Are we ready to talk on GST? Absolutely. Are we going to accept just being thrown aside, no. So we are not trying to stall Parliament. We want the GST that suits the country and benefits the country and we are ready to have that conversation without a problem," Gandhi said. The Winter session of Parliament is scheduled to start tomorrow.
On GST, Gandhi said there were three differences between BJP and Congress, which related to cap on tax to be charged, dispute resolution and one per cent tax on inter-state sales (doing away with it).
"If the government wants to pass the GST, the government has to accept the fact that the Congress party sits in Parliament with 20 per cent of the national vote. That the Congress party has a view," he said, adding they are fighting for a GST that suits and benefits the country.
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Attacking Modi, he told the students that "the central idea of the PM, which I contest I don't agree with, is that he believes that India can be run through the PMO. He believes that - Narendra Modiji himself will transform India. Don't believe that."
Recalling his meeting with 15 of the "biggest investors"
from the world a few days ago, Gandhi said he asked them if they were happy with Modi and what was going on.
The interaction was the first in the series Gandhi proposes to hold across campuses in the country as part of his outreach to students.
On the intolerance issue, Gandhi said "just blanket attacking" doesn't give a solution. "I think the most important thing is to listen to people. See, shouting at people is very easy... But it is much more powerful to listen to people... And let us have conversation.
"Same way hating someone is the easiest thing to do, loving someone is much more powerful than hating. So I feel the more conversation the better it is. The less nastiness the better... It is just a different philosophy."
Asked by a student about his pet "suit-boot-ki-sarkar" jibe, Gandhi said the government was not creating two crore jobs and "all the government is doing right now is giving contracts to large business people and that also very limited large business people."
On the Congress joining the government in Bihar by "compromising" on corruption, an apparent reference to RJD, Gandhi said, "In Bihar it is generally accepted that Nitish Kumar is a relatively honest leader and clean leader."
Gandhi said corruption must be got rid of and the UPA
government had given the Right To Information Act which is the single biggest tool against corruption.
"We will show in question of time what exactly the central government is doing. The BJP is not doing anything to remove corruption. As far as our alliance in Bihar, it is with Nitish Kumar who has a decent record on corruption."
Asked by reporters later about most of those in the audience giving a resounding "yes" on the success of Swach Bharat inside the auditorium, Gandhi said, "It was not clear."
"On Swacch Bharat half the room said nothing has happened. Some people said something has happened. Make In India some people said something has not happened and some people said something has happened.