CM Yogi Slams SP, Congress Over CAA Citizenship Drive
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath on Monday, 29 June 2026, launched a sharp attack on the Samajwadi Party and the Indian National Congress, accusing them of hypocrisy over their opposition to the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA), as fresh citizenship certificates were being granted to eligible beneficiaries under the law.
Posting on X, the Chief Minister wrote in Hindi: 'Samajwadi Party aur Congress ke logon, besharm ke saath doob maro' — a blunt rebuke translating to: 'People of the Samajwadi Party and Congress, you should be ashamed and drown.' He pointedly noted that the majority of those receiving citizenship on the day belonged to Dalit, deprived, and backward communities, and asked why these parties had never raised their voices in support of such individuals.
Context
The Citizenship Amendment Act, 2019 grants a pathway to Indian citizenship for persecuted religious minorities — Hindus, Sikhs, Buddhists, Jains, Parsis, and Christians — who migrated from Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Afghanistan before 31 December 2014. The law was passed by Parliament in December 2019 but its rules were notified only in March 2024, enabling applications to be processed. Citizenship ceremonies have since been held across states, including Uttar Pradesh.
CM Yogi's remarks came on a day when fresh citizenship documents were formally handed over to a new batch of beneficiaries, making the event a flashpoint for renewed political debate between the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and the opposition.
Policy Backdrop
The CAA has been one of the most contested legislative measures in recent Indian political history. The Samajwadi Party, led by Akhilesh Yadav, and the Congress have consistently opposed the law, arguing it discriminates on religious grounds and is unconstitutional. Both parties campaigned against it during the 2022 Uttar Pradesh assembly elections and the 2024 general elections.
The BJP and CM Yogi have countered that the law is a humanitarian measure for those who fled religious persecution, and that opposition to it amounts to denying justice to the most marginalised. By highlighting that today's beneficiaries are predominantly from Dalit and backward communities, Yogi Adityanath is framing the CAA as a social-justice instrument — a direct challenge to the opposition's core political identity.
Stakeholders and Impact
The beneficiaries at the centre of today's ceremony are among thousands of refugees and migrants from Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Afghanistan who have lived in India for years without formal citizenship. For many, particularly those from Scheduled Caste and Other Backward Class backgrounds, citizenship means access to government welfare schemes, property rights, formal employment, and voting rights.
CM Yogi's public framing of these recipients as Dalit and backward-class individuals is politically significant in Uttar Pradesh, a state where caste arithmetic is central to electoral outcomes. The Samajwadi Party and Congress, who position themselves as champions of OBC and Dalit welfare, now face a direct question about their stance on a policy that the BJP says benefits those very communities.
What's Next
With Uttar Pradesh heading into a politically charged period ahead of the next state assembly elections, the CAA citizenship ceremonies are likely to be amplified as BJP campaign events. The opposition will be under pressure to articulate a clearer counter-narrative that addresses the social composition of CAA beneficiaries without appearing to oppose relief for persecuted minorities.
CM Yogi's aggressive posture signals that the BJP intends to keep the CAA at the centre of its political messaging in the state, using each citizenship grant as a visible proof-point of delivery.