"From BJP, anyone gets up and speaks of contesting polls independently. The Chief Minister should first decide who is the leader. Don't stab us in the back. Fight from the front. Contest separately if you have the courage," he told Shiv Sena's 50th annual Dussehra rally at Shivaji Park in central Mumbai.
"Break the alliance and we will show you our surgical strike," Thackeray said, in an apparent reference to BJP MP Kirit Somaiya's recent remark that BJP was all set to contest the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation polls, due early next year, independently.
"Our bond with Mumbaikars is that of blood," he said, adding "We won't come after you (BJP) with a begging bowl."
"For now you (Sena workers) don't think of alliance. We will take a decision on that, whatever that may be," he told the gathering.
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Stating that Modi fought with Pakistan like a man ("mard"), Thackeray congratulated the Indian Army and the prime minister for the surgical strikes.
"After the strikes, I phoned Modi and told him, "Narendrabhai, this is the Narendrabhai we want as PM," he said.
Condemning those who questioned the veracity of the strikes, Thackeray said, "Those who said the strikes were fake have rotten brains and water of gutters of Lahore and Karachi and not blood flows through their veins."
"Did Rahul Gandhi learn of the 'khun ki dalali' from Bofors (scam)," he asked.
"How can you show mistrust on Army while criticising Modi," he said.
Thackeray asserted that he still defended the action of
He also suggested that a war museum be set up on the sprawling Mahalaxmi racecourse grounds in Mumbai.
Alleging religious discrimination in income tax raids, he asked, "Do they raid places in areas like Bhendi Bazar (a Muslim-dominated area in Mumbai?"
"People voted them (BJP) based on their promise of 'achche din'. Now their leaders say 'achche din' is a 'gale ki haddi'. It has taken some time for people to get disillusioned (with the BJP-led government)," he said.
He said the Sena supported reservations based on economic criterion.
Referring to the Maratha community's silent marches and its demand of quota, he said Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis should not play with the sentiments of the agitators.
"I request Maratha community to avoid any action that would demean their ongoing silent marches," he said.
Reservations for Marathas should not eat into quota for others communities, Thackeray said, adding that Fadnavis should learn from Tamil Nadu Chief Minister Jayalalitha, who firmly supported her state's decision to offer reservations beyond 50 per cent.
The controversy about a cartoon on Maratha morcha in the Sena mouthpiece 'Saamana' was unnecessary, he said.
Thackeray had apologised for the cartoon when the controversy broke.