BNP politics

BNP's parliament boycott wrong move

The respondents overwhelmingly rejected the politics of parliament boycott when in opposition. An overwhelming 77.5 percent said they do not support parliament boycott by the BNP and only 15.1 percent said they think it is a good decision.



Politics for people?

Respondents were almost equally divided about whether the BNP has been doing politics on people's issues. 44.8 percent said it is pursuing issues that matter to people while 40 percent said it is not.


Political focus

Almost 50 percent of the respondents think BNP has been trying to get back its lost image and 22.2 percent think it is fighting for people's causes. But 18.3 percent also said the party focus is to rehabilitate Tarique Rahman in politics.


Narayanganj experience

Voters feel the Narayanganj City Corporation election was an eye-opener for everybody. 53 percent said the election result has proven that a party will lose if honest candidates are not filed. 19 percent feel the result has shown that a fair election is possible without army deployment. A large 21 percent however did not respond to the question.


Relationship with India

Majority people think that Bangladesh's relationship with India has progressed although a large number of them are highly critical of India for non-signing of the Teesta water treaty and the dam initiative on Tipai river.

Almost half the respondents said they think Bangladesh-India relationship has progressed and 34.5 percent think it has not.

44.7 percent think Bangladesh cannot trust India because of the non-signing of the Teesta treaty. However, 27.7 percent think the treaty will come to reality soon.

Again, 53 percent feel that it was a breach of trust by India to go ahead with the Tipai Mukh dam.
Almost half the respondents think that the government has been bargaining enough with India to secure its interest. 38.9 percent also support giving transit to India but 35 percent are against it.

 

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