Kolkata, Union Minister Jitendra Singh on Saturday said that BJP has set a target of winning 35 out of 42 Lok Sabha seats in West Bengal in the current Lok Sabha elections.

The BJP leader said only those who have followed the 2019 general elections and the subsequent state assembly elections can realize at the ground level the tremendous change that is being witnessed among the common people in the state.

Singh, Minister of State for Personnel, said the BJP had won 18 of the 42 Lok Sabha seats in 2019, while the TMC got 22 and two went to the Congress, but this time "the tables are going to turn".

He said, "BJP has set a target of winning 35 out of 42 Lok Sabha seats in West Bengal in the current general elections."

Singh claimed that like in the previous elections, this time too the Mamat Banerjee-led Trinamool Congress (TMC) and its government are adopting every pressure tactic to intimidate, threaten or woo the voters, but they do not realize this. That now he has become a voter.More determined and determined than ever before.

He said the common voter of West Bengal has now realized the disadvantages of not being a part of Prime Minister Narendra Modi's 'Developed India Journey' like other states and is in no mood to compromise on it, even if they have to face rebellion. Will be forced to adopt. Stand against the terror unleashed by TM workers and its leaders.

Singh said that not only is enthusiasm being seen among the voters in support of Prime Minister Modi, but the perception of the media and critics is also different this time.

He said, “In the first two elections, the general feeling was that the elections were going TMC's way, this time the general feeling and perception is that everything is going Modi's way.,

Singh said there are high expectations from young voters, especially first-time voters, who have a lot of their future at stake in supporting Mod and his youth-friendly initiatives.

The minister said it is an irony that not a single major industrial unit or multinational establishment has been established in West Bengal for the last several decades, which is an apology to the region and its people who were once called so. That Bengalis are always one step ahead of other states.

He said, “But today it is the other way around, where other states have progressed while the state of West Bengal is still struggling."