Connect with us

General

Youth Congress President Archit Shantaram Naik Slams BJP, Says BJYM President Needs “Basic Tuition” Before Facing Media

Published

on

The President of the Goa Pradesh Youth Congress, Archit Shantaram Naik, has launched a scathing attack on the BJP leadership, demanding that the BJP National President Nitin Nabin, Chief Minister of Goa Dr. Pramod Sawant, and BJP Goa President Damu Naik first educate and tutor their BJYM President before allowing him to speak irresponsibly in the media on serious constitutional and legal matters.

Reacting strongly to the BJYM President’s recent statements, Archit Naik said that making casual and misleading remarks on provisions such as Article 163 of the Constitution exposes not only a shocking lack of legal knowledge but also the intellectual bankruptcy of the BJP’s youth wing.

“Speaking without understanding the Constitution is not bravery—it is ignorance. The BJYM President’s statements are misleading, irresponsible, and dangerous, as they attempt to confuse the people of Goa on matters of law and governance,” Archit Naik asserted.

He further stated that such comments clearly reflect the political immaturity of the BJYM leadership and their blind habit of parroting half-baked narratives without any understanding of constitutional responsibilities or democratic norms.

Archit Naik added that instead of acting as a mouthpiece to divert attention, the BJP’s youth wing should introspect and answer uncomfortable questions facing Goan youth today—rising unemployment, skyrocketing prices, shrinking job opportunities, and complete governance failure under the BJP regime.

“The BJP has nothing to offer Goa’s youth except confusion, misinformation, and empty rhetoric. Before lecturing others, the BJYM must first understand the Constitution they so casually misquote,” Naik said.

He concluded by stating that the Youth Congress will continue to expose the BJP’s incompetence and will not allow the people of Goa—especially its youth—to be misled by ill-informed statements and political theatrics.

Continue Reading