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We brought in GST, we're not against it: Rahul

December 12, 2015 18:18 IST

Congress vice president Rahul Gandhi, with party MP Gaurav Gogoi, greets supporters in Guwahati on Saturday. 

Congress vice president Rahul Gandhi said on Saturday that there was 'no link' between the National Herald and the Goods and Services Tax Bill issues and asserted that his party is for the tax reform measure if three differences are resolved.

"In the media, there is some sense that the National Herald and the GST are linked. I say to you here that there is absolutely no link between National Herald and GST. National Herald is a separate issue and the GST is a separate issue," said Rahul while interacting with editors and senior journalists in Guwahati.

Congress has been protesting in Parliament on National Herald issue alleging political vendetta after the Delhi high court refused to quash summonses to its leaders including party chief Sonia Gandhi and Rahul.

The disruption of Parliament proceedings has led to delay in taking up of GST Bill that seeks to bring in a uniform indirect tax regime across the country.

"Congress party had brought in the GST. Modiji and Jaitleyji had vehemently opposed it. They had called it all sorts of names. They rubbished it, said it cannot be done...it's completely nonsense," Rahul said, referring to Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Finance Minister Arun Jaitley.

"We, on the other hand, were trying to push the GST. It is important because it makes India less complicated. It allows goods to move. It removes red-tapeism. We are hundred per cent proposers of the GST," the Congress leader said.

The Congress had stalled passage of the GST Constitution Amendment Bill in the last session of Parliament over its demand that a revenue-neutral rate not higher than 18 per cent be mentioned in the Constitution Amendment bill.

It is also opposed to states being given powers to levy additional 1 per cent tax on supply of goods over and above the GST rate.

"We have three differences with the Bharatiya Janata Party on the GST. You know what those are. There is that dispute mechanism where we feel that it should be effective. People who are involved with the dispute should not be the resolvers of the dispute," Rahul said.

"And the second issue is a cap on tax. We don't want any government in this country to have an unlimited window of tax. We represent the poor people of this country. We represent the farmers. We represent the labourers. We do not want them to have a massive weight on top of them," the Congress leader said.

"We do not want the government servants and others to have a huge tax burden. That is why we want to put a roof on it. We want to put a limit on it. They (BJP) don't. That's the difference," Rahul said.

"These are the three structural differences. If these differences are resolved the Congress party is for GST. Within this framework the Congress party is perfectly happy, we have already stated that, and happy to move GST forward," he said.

During his interaction with the editors and senior journalists here in the presence of Chief Minister Tarun Gogoi, Rahul off the record discussed with them the prevailing political scenario of the country, Assam and the North East region, the issue of illegal immigration from Bangladesh and India's foreign policy.

He was confident of the ruling Congress under Tarun Gogoi retaining power for the fourth consecutive term in the 2016 Assam Assembly election.

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