Cong leader claims RS seat up for Rs 100 cr

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That the upper house is a bunch of moneyed guys became clearer with  senior Congress leader Chaudhary Birender Singh claiming that a seat in the house is up for  grabs for those who can shell out up to Rs 100 crore.Of course the sitting Congress MP later blamed it on the media after the BJP latched on to his remarks and accused the ruling Congress of being in the habit of "cutting out deals" and having brought politics to such a "low level". Singh in a damage control claimed that what appeared in the media is an "entirely wrong version" of what he had said.
 
Addressing a rally in Jind on Sunday the Congress leader had said, "once someone told me that he had a budget of Rs 100 crore to become a Rajya Sabha MP. But when he totalled the expenditure later, he found it was Rs 80 crore and he had ended up saving Rs 20 crore.""Now you think, a man who succeeds taking the membership of the Rajya Sabha by spending 80 crore or 100 crore rupees, what will they think about the poor," he had added.Facing flak for his remarks, Singh said, "my version was simple that there is a trend of new political class more people with money power..they are entering in Lok Sabha and the Rajya Sabha and I had given figures from a newspaper. I had made a mention that after the Lok Sabha results of 2009, certain figures were given in a newspaper report that 360 of the candidates, who had won were crorepatis and a dozen and half of them were billionaries.”
 
Singh said this is how the money power is becoming more important in Parliamentary democracy. "There are also certain people, who can spend crores of rupees to make an entry into politics…I had also said that if such elements will have their influence  this will muzzle the voice of those people to raise the issues of the poor and take up their causes," he told reporters.  Singh maintained that there are a number of MPs in the Rajya Sabha, who are "very rich" and "they face no difficulty in becoming a member of the Rajya Sabha because in this age, the rich people easily enter the Upper House."
 
Singh was a Congress general secretary in charge of Himachal but was dropped in the recent reshuffle and is known detractor of Haryana chief minister Bhupinder Singh Hooda. Attacking the Congress leader, BJP spokesperson and Rajya Sabha member Prakash Javadekar said Singh must be giving his own example. "Congress is in the habit of cutting out deals…Congress has brought politics in the country to such a low level," he said. Singh, however, felt that he did not say that Rajya Sabha seats are purchased for Rs 100 crore. "I am only saying that the voice of the poor is drowned due to rising influence of money in democracy."Quoting the figures of rich MPs in Lok Sabha, he said "on this basis, such powerful people can come even in Rajya Sabha by winning the election with the power of money."
 
Referring to a Supreme Court decision on debarring criminal elements from contesting elections, he said as a benchmark has been set on that issue, other things like the use of money power should also come under consideration."It's not only me. Thousands of party workers say it. If people say something to alert their own government, the organization and the government should also think over that. It's not that every time somebody speaks, he will speak wrong or commit indiscipline," he said.
 

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