Top themes from Union Minister and BJP National President J. P. Nadda’s speech: “These two sahabzade used to shout ‘vote theft,’ but now they’ve gone silent, caught red-handed, they quietly ran away and now don’t even discuss it. They were trying to form a government on the basis of these ‘ghuspaithiya’ (infiltrators). Will Bihar have a government of ‘ghuspaithiya’ or of Biharis? If a Bihari government is formed, as Amit Shah said: ‘first detect, then delete, then deport.’ First, detect them– the Election Commission has detected this. Should such voters be allowed to remain? Are they ‘ghuspaithiya’ or not? Should they have been detected or not? If we are voters, then my father would also have been a voter in 2002– somewhere he would have been. If the father can’t be found, then where did the son come from? That is why we must teach these ‘ghuspaithiya’ a lesson; we must keep in mind what is happening. And to protect ‘ghuspaithiya’, these two came together as brothers. Remember, they want to run the country on the strength of these ‘ghuspaithiya.’ It started in Bihar, and now it will continue across the whole country. Everywhere, first we will detect, then delete, then deport.”