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Sobita Gautam Urges Voters to Give RSP a Single Majority

Rastriya Swatantra Party (RSP) leader and candidate for Chitwan Constituency No. 3, Sobita Gautam, has urged voters to give her party a single majority for political stability and development in the country.

Addressing an election program organized in Chitwan on Monday, Gautam stated that coalition governments formed by small parties cannot provide a solution for the country.

Gautam recalled the state's suppression of students who were in their school and college uniforms during the Gen-Z movement. She said, "In the movement, our young brothers and sisters were shot. After that barbaric suppression, the youth raised their voices saying they no longer want this leadership."

She accused the old parties and their leaders of failing to improve the country's condition and forcing the younger generation to go abroad.

Leader Gautam claimed that no one in Nepal's parliamentary history has prioritized the people's issues. "A coalition government is formed, and within nine months or a year, the game of changing the Prime Minister begins," she said. "Leaders became busy in the rush of who would become the next Prime Minister by removing the incumbent one. They spent their time just saving their seats."

She urged voters not to make the mistake of splitting their votes this time. "If you say a few votes for this person and a few for that person, the country will fall into instability again," she added. "RSP needs a single majority to make laws and implement them."

Gautam openly praised the work of the party's senior, Balendra Shah. Stating that Balen has proven how much development a mayor can achieve by exercising their authority, she claimed that Rabi Lamichhane would now change the face of the country by leading the federal government.

"Balen ji has proven it from Kathmandu; now Rabi Lamichhane will prove it from Singha Durbar," she said. "This time, we have brought forward the son of Madhesh, Balen Shah, as the Prime Minister."

Stating that she did not come merely to distribute assurances like other leaders, Gautam presented herself as a daughter of the people. She said, "To some, I may seem like a daughter, to others a granddaughter or a sister. I am a daughter of a common family. The courtyard of my house will always remain open to hear your grievances."

She appealed to the voters to make her victorious by voting for the bell (Ghanti) symbol to voice the issues of inflation, unemployment, and farmers' problems exactly as they are in the parliament.

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