Key Points

Union Minister Bandi Sanjay stated that Telangana's Gen Z voters ended KCR's family rule even before Nepal's youth protests began. He was directly responding to BRS leader KTR's comments about potential Nepal-like unrest in India. Sanjay pointed to the BJP's recent clean sweep in Hyderabad University elections as evidence of youth support. He emphasized that India's young voters prefer democratic change through ballots rather than street protests.

Key Points: Bandi Sanjay Says Telangana Gen Z Ended KCR Family Rule First

  • Bandi Sanjay credits Telangana youth for ending KCR's family rule via ballot
  • Responds to KTR's warning about Nepal-like protests happening in India
  • Cites BJP's ABVP clean sweep in Hyderabad University elections as proof
  • Claims India's Gen Z removes governments democratically and ruthlessly
2 min read

Gen Z of Telangana ended KCR's 'family rule', says MoS Bandi Sanjay

Union Minister Bandi Sanjay claims Telangana's youth ended KCR's family rule before Nepal's Gen Z protests, responding to KTR's warning about India unrest.

"Telangana's Gen Z did it first - by voting out KCR & kids, giving BRS a big zero - Bandi Sanjay"

Hyderabad, Sep 21

Union Minister of State for Home Affairs Bandi Sanjay Kumar said on Sunday that even before Nepal's Gen Z hit the streets against nepotism, the Gen Z of Telangana ended the "family rule" of KCR in Telangana.

He was responding to Bharat Rashtra Samithi (BRS) working president K. T. Rama Rao's statement that a Nepal-like Gen Z protest could happen in India.

"Nepal's Gen Z hit the streets against Nepotism. But Telangana's Gen Z did it first - by voting out KCR & kids, giving BRS - a big zero in Lok Sabha and ending their family rule in the state," Bandi Sanjay posted on 'X'.

"Here, this Nepo kid has got the reality check he deserved. India's Gen Z is ruthless at the ballot; they remove most democratically," added the MoS, who posted a video clip of K. T. Rama Rao's remark, during NDTV Yuva Conclave and most of the audience saying no.

KTR, as Rama Rao is popularly known, said that a Nepal-like Gen Z protest could happen in India if governments fail to address the aspirations of the people.

"If governments continue to fail them, if governments continue to fail the aspirations of the people of India, why not? Yes," he said when asked if he thought Nepal-like protests could happen in India.

When the same question was posed to the audience, mostly consisting of young people, and many of them said no, the former Telangana minister said, "The night is still young, let's see."

In another post, Bandi Sanjay congratulated Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad (ABVP) on its victory in the University of Hyderabad (UoH) students' union elections.

"Gen Z of UoH is with ABVP," he wrote while conveying 'hearty congratulations to ABVP on a historic victory' in the University of Hyderabad.

"From President, Vice President, General Secretary, Joint Secretary, Sports Secretary, and Cultural Secretary - every key position has been secured. This clean sweep reflects the trust Gen Z at UoH has placed in nationalist ideology. From Punjab to DU to UoH, with each win, Campus after campus, the saffron wave is turning momentum into mandate," said the BJP leader.

- IANS

Share this article:

Reader Comments

P
Priya S
While I agree that family politics needs to end, let's not pretend this is only about Gen Z. Many older voters also rejected BRS. Credit should go to all voters who want change, not just one generation.
Karthik V
KTR's comparison with Nepal was completely unnecessary. Indian democracy has its own mechanisms for change through elections. Our youth are politically aware and use their voting power wisely.
S
Sarah B
As someone who studied in Hyderabad, I've seen how frustrated the youth were with unemployment and lack of opportunities. The election results were a clear message - perform or perish!
A
Aditya G
The ABVP sweep in University of Hyderabad shows which way the wind is blowing. Campus politics often reflects larger political trends. Young India wants development, not dynasty politics. 🚀
M
Meera T
While I appreciate the change, let's hope the new government delivers on promises. Youth aspirations need concrete action - jobs, education, and opportunities. The ballot has spoken, now action must follow.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Leave a Comment

Minimum 50 characters 0/50