Oxford English didn't help you, Muraleedharan reminds Tharoor amid 'Modi praise' row

Oxford English didn't help you, Muraleedharan reminds Tharoor amid 'Modi praise' row

Thiruvananthapuram: Days after the KPCC directed party leaders to stop making public statements after a controversy broke out over Shashi Tharoor's alleged 'Modi praise,' party colleague K Muraleedharan has come up with a fresh salvo.

In a veiled attack, Murleedharan said not "Oxford English" but "anti-Modi" stand had helped the party-led front win the Thiruvananthapuram seat.

Without naming Tharoor, he said Congress leader and former MP, late A Charles, who did not know Oxford English, had won the Thiruvananthapuram Lok Sabha seat three times.

Addressing a press meet here, the senior leader, who represents Vadakara constituency in the Lok Sabha, also said even if he had quit the Congress party some time back, he had never supported the BJP or sought its favour.

Muraleedharan was apparently referring to Tharoor's recent criticism against him that those who asked him to quit the party and join the BJP had rejoined the Congress barely eight years ago after leaving it and attacking it for years.

"Even A Charles, who spoke good Malayalam, had won from the constituency three times. He had not won because of Oxford English. It was because, Thiruvananthapuram has been a Congress bastion like Vadakara which was generally considered a constituency in which the CPI(M) has an upper hand," he told reporters.

But, this time, Congress candidates had won both these seats because of the "anti-Modi" stance of the UDF, he said, adding that there was no change in his stand.

Muraleedharan also said the party had decided not to initiate any action against Tharoor based on his explanation.

The former union minister had earned the wrath of some his party colleagues for his remarks that Modi should be praised for doing the "right things."

Muraleedhran, son of former Chief Minister K Karunakaran, was among senior Congress leaders who had severely criticised the former union minister for his "Modi praise."

While Muraleedharan had said those who wanted to praise Modi should join BJP, another party MP, Benny Behannan, said glorifying the prime minister was not the job of Congressmen.

Opposition leader in the state Assembly, Ramesh Chennithala and T N Pratapan MP also came out against Tharoor, following which KPCC president, Mullappally Ramachandran had sought his explanation.

Tharoor in his email reply to Ramachandran had stated that he had never justified the prime minister, but had in-fact been a "strong critic" of the BJP government.

The KPCC had accepted the explanation from the three-time MP and instructed congress leaders to refrain from airing their views in public on the controversy.

(With inputs from PTI)

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