Rahul Gandhi claims his upcoming ‘H-bomb’ will expose vote theft, saying no one in India will doubt Narendra Modi’s involvement

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Wayanad: Congress MP and Lok Sabha Leader of Opposition Rahul Gandhi on Saturday reiterated his claim of “vote chori” (vote theft), asserting that his forthcoming “hydrogen bomb” of evidence will expose the truth and prove that Prime Minister Narendra Modi came to power through stolen votes.

“We are going to reveal a hydrogen bomb that will completely expose the reality of the situation. We have open-and-shut proof for our claims. I am not saying anything without evidence—we have 100 percent confirmation of several events that are about to come out,” Rahul Gandhi said in Wayanad.

Referring to his previous press conferences alleging systematic fraudulent addition and deletion of voters, he added, “We have shown it in Mahadevpura, we have shown it in Aland. We will present it so clearly that no one in India can doubt that Narendra Modi ji committed vote chori to win the election.”

He also accused Chief Election Commissioner Gyanesh Kumar of “protecting vote chors,” citing the ongoing investigation into attempts to delete 6,000 voter names from Aland assembly constituency as a “clear indictment” of the poll panel’s head.

“What we presented yesterday at the press conference is black-and-white proof. The CID investigation in Karnataka is specifically seeking information on phone numbers used in vote chori. The CEC is being questioned by the CID—that is as strong an indictment as it gets. This is not my statement; it is a fact,” the LoP said.

When asked whether the “hydrogen bomb” would involve Prime Minister Modi’s Varanasi constituency, he replied, “That is for you to guess, for the media to speculate. My job is to deliver, and I will do that.”

Earlier, Rahul Gandhi, along with his sister and Wayanad MP Priyanka Gandhi, attended the inauguration of the Oommen Chandy Memorial Auditorium at Kottathara Grama Panchayat, Venniyodu, Wayanad. Highlighting the former Kerala Chief Minister’s humility, he contrasted it with what he described as the arrogance of certain national leaders.

“You meet leaders at various levels who get a little power and become arrogant. Some senior leaders at the national level have no humility. What made Oommen Chandy humble was his connection with the people of Kerala,” he said.

On September 18, Rahul Gandhi had accused Chief Election Commissioner Gyanesh Kumar of protecting “people who are destroying Indian democracy” and alleged that certain groups were systematically suppressing minority votes favoring Congress. The ECI responded, clarifying that “no deletion of votes can be done online by any member of the public” and confirmed that “no wrongful deletion of electors in Aland” occurred.

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