Bhubaneswar: Prime Minister Narendra Modi was yet again ruling the social media on Tuesday, but for the wrong reasons this time.
After reports of the GDP contracting by a record 23.9 per cent in the first quarter of the current fiscal year, the worst among big economies, Twitter started trending with #ModiHaiToMumkinHai to criticise the PM.
Take a look at what Twitter is up to.
One user went down the memory lane to fish out an old tweet by Modi criticizing the then Finance Minister when Congress was in power.
Who is this man. Talks a lot of sense.?#ModiHaiToMumkinHai pic.twitter.com/R3nrNjlvsF
— परवेज़ M (@VazeIndian) September 1, 2020
And check this sarcastic tweet by @nethinguwant.
Finally we have the highest GDP growth.#ModiHaiToMumkinHai pic.twitter.com/y9ltwjZ67B
— PSK (@nethinguwant) September 1, 2020
Here’s a funny one, highlighting every event that has happened that led to the GDP decline.
Don’t blame CORONA. Modi’s credibility (due to Rafale), rupees, and GDP all started falling together ahead:
Indian GDP before March 2020
Q2 2018-19 7.1%
Q3 2018-19 6.6%
Q4 2018-19 5.8%
Q1 2019-20 5.0%
Q2 2019-20 4.5%
Q3 2019-20 4.7%
Q4 2019-20 3.1%#ModiHaiToMumkinHai pic.twitter.com/sjvJUstSrx— K Kumar 37.6K 100% Follow-back (@Yr_Conscience) September 1, 2020
Here is some advice from a young twitter user, Rahul Pandey after the NEET-JEE backlash, Mann Ki Baat episode, SSC examinations, and things in general.
#speakupforSSCRaliwaystudents#ModiHaiToMumkinHai #NEET2020
Lessons from our journey
Never praise government, they are not going to listen
Never hope from anyone, all are playing their own politics
Be consistent with your demand and don’t change hatchtag frequently pic.twitter.com/EnEMbEzlHl
— Rahul Pandey (@Rahul_T04) September 1, 2020
This tweet will surely get you cracking.
Feeling low like our GDP #ModiHaiToMumkinHai #GDP2020 pic.twitter.com/sXRWiDqeII
— अमिता ताई (@ImAmeeta) September 1, 2020
Earlier, the PM was called out for the most dislikes on YouTube for his ‘Mann Ki Baat’ episode on August 30.
Also Read: In Worst Contraction, Indian Economy Slips By 23.9% In Q1 Of 2020-21