Top 39 Quotes & Sayings by P. Chidambaram

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an Indian politician P. Chidambaram.
Last updated on December 21, 2024.
P. Chidambaram

Palaniappan Chidambaram is an Indian politician and former attorney who currently serves as Member of Parliament, Rajya Sabha. He served as the Chairman of the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Home Affairs from 2017 to 2018.

Today, to allege corruption seems to be the pastime of most people. All kinds of allegations are leveled. I think it is self-defeating.
Independence is a very subjective assessment.
A government can do only what is feasible given the political and economic context. — © P. Chidambaram
A government can do only what is feasible given the political and economic context.
Two successive commissioners in London police were fired by the mayor that came into office. That doesn't mean the police in London is not independent and does not exercise powers. Ultimately it is the political executive that has to answer.
Not all ideas will be accepted, but every idea deserves its own space, and every idea deserves to be expressed.
Once the war of words begins, truth is the casualty.
All wisdom does not reside in Delhi.
I don't think we should label budgets even before the budget is presented.
Pakistan is not a rogue state, but it harbours and covertly supports rogue elements. While war is not the answer, hard or coercive diplomacy could be.
We cannot afford to leave the poor behind.
I think preaching equality among unequals is the worst form of discrimination.
Corruption is not the sole test of your worthiness to form the government.
The police force cannot be completely independent of the executive government. — © P. Chidambaram
The police force cannot be completely independent of the executive government.
I firmly believe that the Constitution is the most powerful challenge to illiberal tendencies. If the Constitution is followed in letter and spirit and if the laws are made in the spirit in which Constitution was made, liberties can indeed be protected.
It is possible that, post-Kyoto, the developed countries will recognise the requirements of the developing world.
If you go back to any period in India's history, all the hard decisions this country had to take were taken when the Congress was in power.
Let me tell you, very frankly, when I went to the Harvard Business School I was more or less a committed socialist.
I think people respect governments that take decisions and act decisively.
'Big business' was a bad phrase in India. To be accused of being big business was the worst accusation you could make. All that has gone now. The whole mindset has changed.
I have maintained that the people of India are ahead of their governments. The people of India are at least 10 to 15 years ahead of their governments.
I readily concede that a prime minister is not required to speak on every occasion or on every subject, but when there is a duty to speak, silence is unacceptable. Silence can be a strategy, silence can be a tactic, but silence can never be an answer to the ills of our polity and the fault lines of our society.
In income tax, there is no case for amnesty.
The voter does not vote only on one issue, the voter votes on a multiplicity of issues.
Growth is a panacea for many ills in society; not entirely, but many.
People are wiser than we are willing to attribute to them.
People understand what is good for them in the long run. In the long run, what is good for people is that India's economy continues to grow at clipping pace, 8% and above, that itself brings host of benefits to the people. It brings better roads, it brings better schools, brings more money to the communities, it brings more jobs.
I don't think anyone has qualms in saying victory to the people of India. But when a political party appropriates such a slogan and says this is the definition of patriotism, those who say it are patriotic and those who don't are not patriotic, then I reject that definition.
I belong to the Congress. My party has always supported prohibition, though it may not have been successful in implementing prohibition in many states. — © P. Chidambaram
I belong to the Congress. My party has always supported prohibition, though it may not have been successful in implementing prohibition in many states.
When I came back to India after Harvard Business School, I started as a lawyer and as a trade union leader.
Evidence points out that if you raise tariffs too much it will increase smuggling.
As far as the Congress is concerned, we condemn any attempts to oppress the Dalits in strongest terms. If there are parties trying to fan the OBC-Dalit divide in Tamil Nadu, we need to collectively condemn them.
Police can only act on intelligence.
Unfortunately, terror is now linked to immigration, and anyone with dark skin or a beard or a Muslim name is suspect. Russia, France, then the United Kingdom, and now even Germany have no qualms about going far beyond their borders to strike at the enemies of their countries.
A government must always be prepared for the unexpected.
I respect the view of a rating agency, but I do not make a budget for the rating agency. I make a budget for the people of India.
Criticism of a policy is welcome. But in the garb of criticizing a policy, if you allege that the policy was made for corrupt purposes, I reject it.
Congress is not a party which fades when not in power
What we will become depends on us — © P. Chidambaram
What we will become depends on us
I know my limitations. I live and work according to my limitations. And my party only two weeks ago has clearly declared that the leader of the party after Ms Sonia Gandhi will be Mr Rahul Gandhi. And all of us, including me, have expressed our solid support to Mr Rahul Gandhi.
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