The verbal war between Trinamool Congress (TMC) MP Kalyan Banerjee and Mahua Moitra does not seem to stop at the moment. Kalyan Banerjee has once again commented on party leader Mahua Moitra.
He said that “that woman is not part of my subject and she is” very lower level “. Banerjee even said that talking about her is a waste of time and energy.
He further told that at one time he was very angry because of Mahua Moitra and he also said some things to “Didi (Mamata Banerjee)”. However, now he regrets that. He was a waste of time and energy.
Banerjee said that the message of a junior lawyer changed his thinking on the matter. He said, “Now I think I wasted my time and energy. He is not worth paying attention to me. I made a mistake by paying attention to it. Now I have understood this.
Also read: First word-arrow, then Mamta’s meeting and now resignation … Kalyan Banerjee vs Mahua Moitra’s full timeline of cold war
With this statement of Kalyan Banerjee, the internal discord within the TMC has come out even more openly. Kalyan Banerjee has an old fight with TMC MP Mahua Moitra in the Lok Sabha and the two leaders have openly criticized each other on many occasions.
The beginning of the war of words started from here
Recently, after a podcast interview, there was a fierce war between Mahua Moitra and Kalyan Banerjee. In his interview, Mahua Moitra attacked Kalyan Banerjee and said, “You cannot fight wrestling with a pig, because the pig likes mud and you get dirty.” He further said that in India, there are ‘anti-female, sexually frustrated, corrupt men’ and such people are present in every party in Parliament.
Also read: TMC MP Kalyan Banerjee told Union Minister Shivraj Chauhan ‘broker of rich’, outrage in BJP
After this statement, Kalyan Banerjee retaliated and said, ‘I have recently noticed the personal comments made by Mahua Moitra in a podcast. The choosing of his words, including the use of language such as comparing a fellow MP with a ‘pig’, is not only unfortunate, but it also shows deep neglect to the basic rules of decent dialogue.
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