NEW DELHI: Narendra Modi remains recognized for his impromptu and detailed public speech. But do you know how many statements he has made since taking office as prime minister? The answer: a magnificent 775.
And it used the public resources available on the personal modal website and the Press Information (PIB) website and spoke with ministers and senior officials of the Union, who had worked closely with him. To inform the public about the public's love to talk in general, but first the mathematics.
Modi has celebrated almost 19 speeches every month since becoming Prime Minister on May 26, 2014. That corresponds to approximately two public statements every three days. Most of his speeches lasted more than 30 minutes.
"He has the divine talent for re-art, communication, and intelligence to talk about every problem in his heart," said Prime Minister Jitendra Singh.
At the archive site of former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, it was found that Singh has had a total of 1,401 words in 10 years UPO-1 and UPA-2. This corresponds to about 11 speeches per month.
On the contrary, Modi had already spoken more often, when Singh made five-year hours in his office at UPA-1 or UPA-2. And he did not find an account of Singh's political or electoral speech as prime minister. But Congress did not seem impressed by Modi's speech.
"The problem with the ways of the Prime Minister that he lives by dictate" calls my government "It is not surprising, since PM modes exhausted all their attention to its details, instead of focusing on governance, the country is going to dogs, "said Rep. Manish Tewari. Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi, the Union's minority minister, apparently could not disagree.
"Manmohan Singh was a reader, Modi is a leader," Naqvi said, noting that Singh always reads a prepared text while speaking in ExTempore mode. "PM modes have social, political and administrative experience, and he can control the realities and problems of ordinary people, and his speeches continue never repeated," he said.
An analysis of his speeches shows that Modes 2015 was the most talked about, a total of 264 addresses. It was a year of significant visits to the MPs, who took every opportunity to reach the Indian Diaspora and the international public on international platforms. Modes like the PM had at least 166 speeches abroad, or almost all four.
"The PM modes would be happy to express their message loud and clear. He did two or three times that the mind does not even speak one day if it considers it necessary," said a senior government official on condition of anonymity.
There were at least four months, in which fashions spoke 30 or more, mainly because he had traveled abroad during those months. Thus, in November 2015, Modi held a total of 36 speeches, including four statements in the Bihar investigations. He then traveled to Britain, the G20 in Turkey, the Asia-India Summit in Malaysia, Singapore, Paris at the summit on climate protection and Kashmir.
His 32 speeches in April 2015 took place during a visit to Paris, Germany, and Canada. He made 31 statements in September 2014 when he completed his first visit to the United States and Japan.
Prime Minister Jitendra Singh said fads are the most significant draw for the party in the polls because people want to hear it. "For this first time, we have a PM that spontaneously identifies with the common man in all parts and regions of the country." This phenomenon is rare for a heterogeneous society like India because the aspirations of Jammu and Kashmir would be very different from those of Gujarat, they differ from Tamil Nadu, and that may be Manipur, "he said.
Singh said fads could come to terms with people because he knows democracy so well. "The age of fashions will be known as the beginning of the foundation of democracy in India without conclusions about the family or a line of a dynasty. People are ready to trust what it says," he says.
"His demonstration speech: in the transition period there may be difficulties, but people were willing to cooperate because they thought that if fashions said that, it was for the good of the country."