In a spirited address from the sacred town of Vrindavan, BJP National President Nitin Nabin kicked off the party’s campaign momentum for the 2027 elections. Standing alongside Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath after paying obeisance at the Banke Bihari Temple, Nabin unleashed a sharp critique against opposition leaders who treat politics as mere recreation.
Nabin and Yogi arrived in Mathura on a crisp Sunday morning, fresh from participating in Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s ‘Mann Ki Baat’ radio program. Their temple visit set the tone for an energized gathering of party workers, where Nabin didn’t hold back. Without naming anyone directly, he targeted those who dive into elections with fanfare only to vanish abroad afterward, leaving serious governance to others.
“Some people see politics as a hobby, not a solemn duty,” Nabin declared. He accused these forces of sowing division in the nation and state, suddenly invoking the Constitution during polls while their actions historically fueled chaos and disorder.
This marked Nabin’s first visit to Lord Krishna’s city as BJP chief, and he bowed to its sanctity while rallying cadres for the battles ahead. With 2027 looming, he urged strengthening the organization at every booth level and regularly hosting ‘Mann Ki Baat’ sessions to keep the spirit alive.
Nabin highlighted Uttar Pradesh’s transformation under PM Modi and CM Yogi—from a ‘BIMARU’ state plagued by gun-toting regimes to an ‘Uttam Pradesh’ thriving on democratic votes. The era of jungle raj is over, he asserted, crediting grassroots workers for BJP’s repeated national victories.
As the sun set over Mathura, the message was clear: BJP is gearing up early, drawing on spiritual energy and organizational might to dominate the future political landscape.
