This happened in a recent political exchange between Congress leader Rahul Gandhi and Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal, especially with regard to promises Kejriwal made to clean the Yamuna River. Rahul Gandhi termed Kejriwal as an unfulfilled promise on purification of the Yamuna, an assurance he made five years back. Despite this argument, the water is still undrinkable at the river as Rahul mocks with a question over whether Kejriwal showed enough guts and visited a nearby hospital if indeed he drank any water from this river.
As such, Kejriwal, in his own election campaign manifesto, had stated that he was going to "clean the Yamuna River altogether within five years." Five years have passed with the water as polluted as before, and thus Rahul Gandhi brought this issue back to Kejriwal: Gandhi also was quick to sarcastically comment that the new "political culture," which Kejriwal repeatedly claimed to provide, was really nothing but mimicry of that of Narendra Modi.
During the discussion, Rahul Gandhi further said that Kejriwal, along with other leaders from his party, was trying to position himself in a similar way as Modi, a strategy that involved dividing various communities for political gain. He accused Kejriwal of being silent on issues of communal strife and divisiveness, just like Modi, only to speak out when necessary, furthering the agenda of polarization.
Rahul Gandhi also compared the BJP, the RSS, and Congress. He stated that the real fight in the elections was between the BJP and Congress. He detested the present political scenario, saying that if Modi resigned as Prime Minister, no one would likely replace him, and the country would continue to witness unrest without significant leadership.
Conclusion In a nutshell, Rahul Gandhi talked about the battle of ideologies by criticizing Kejriwal's inability to focus on the important issues and stated that the political battle in Delhi would eventually show the real scenario.