"In our country....There are many laws which have been made, which don't have any relevance today. They are of no use. If government has to work fast, if government has to work on the straight path the jungle of laws that has been created has to be cleaned up. I want to end all these laws," he said.
Addressing BJP workers at the HAL airport on his first visit to Karnataka after becoming Prime Minister, Modi said his government was now engaged in a clean-up act.
Modi was apparently referring to the popular mandate his party received unseating the UPA government and things it has to undo now.
Modi said, "People feel surprised whether the new government has to be doing this (cleaning) work, but you will be surprised that that I'm forced to do it."
More From This Section
Observing that earlier governments used to take pride in making laws, he said they used to feel happy in saying that "we made laws, but I have decided to end all those laws which are of no use."
"We have five to 10 laws on one single issue, laws which are over hundred years, over one hundred fifty years, over fifty years, and one interprets it the way he wants and stops work."
"There should be direction to the work, quickness to it," the Prime Minister said.
Noting that September 25 is the birth anniversary of Pandit Deen Dayal Upadyaya, stalwart of erstwhile Jan Sangh, he said he had been "a source of inspiration for all of us."