Bharat Rashtra Samithi (BRS) MLC K Kavitha has launched a sharp attack on Telangana Chief Minister Revanth Reddy, questioning his silence on the Enforcement Directorate’s (ED) chargesheet in the National Herald case involving senior Congress leaders Sonia Gandhi and Rahul Gandhi.
Speaking to ANI on Sunday, Kavitha criticized the CM for not making any public statement despite ongoing protests by Congress workers across India. “Surprisingly, the Telangana CM has been very silent on this. Although he is on an international trip, I believe the internet will definitely work in Japan,” she said sarcastically. “We were expecting a statement from the CM, but it is very interesting politics happening in Telangana. That’s why I’ve always referred to him as an ‘RSS CM’,” she added.
In addition to her remarks on the ED case, Kavitha accused the Congress-led Telangana government of administrative failure, particularly in handling the aftermath of recent hailstorms. Speaking at a housewarming ceremony for a BRS leader in Khammam district, she said no official review was conducted on the extensive crop damage, despite the presence of the Deputy CM and other ministers in the region.
She alleged that paddy fields were submerged and mango crops were devastated, yet the state government remained unresponsive. Kavitha demanded a minimum compensation of ₹20,000 per acre for affected farmers and criticized the government for not fulfilling its promises under schemes like Rythu Bharosa and Aathmiya Bharosa.
Highlighting public dissatisfaction, she accused ministers of being more interested in political infighting than public service. “Government hospitals are in such poor condition that people are afraid to even enter them,” she claimed.
Kavitha contrasted the Congress administration with the former BRS-led government, pointing to achievements like the Bhakta Ramadasu Project, which she said brought irrigation to 60,000 acres shortly after Telangana’s formation.
Calling on the public to attend the upcoming BRS Rajatotsavam Sabha in large numbers, Kavitha urged citizens to demand action-oriented governance rather than “empty slogans and broken promises.”