West Bengal Minister Babul Supriyo and BJP MP Abhijit Gangopadhyay engaged in a heated exchange on the Vidyasagar Bridge over the alleged honking of car horns. The video of the same has been surfaced widely on the internet.
Supriyo accused the Tamluk MP of using inappropriate language against him, while Gangopadhyay countered that it was Supriyo who resorted to unparliamentary language during their confrontation on the night of January 3, 2024.
Gangopadhyay recounted that Supriyo halted his vehicle and directed abusive language at him, asserting that the horn noise originated from a car behind his, not Supriyo’s. The former Calcutta High Court judge stated that Supriyo had exited his vehicle to confront him.
Supriyo, who serves as West Bengal’s Minister for Information Technology and Electronics, claimed his intention was simply to inform Gangopadhyay that his vehicle was speeding with the use of a hooter. “But he (Gangopadhyay) cursed at me as I approached,” added the singer-turned-politician.
Notably, Supriyo, who previously held a Minister of State position in the Narendra Modi administration, switched allegiance from the BJP to the Trinamool Congress (TMC) in September 2021.
A video that surfaced later showed Supriyo demanding an apology from the BJP MP for his conduct. Although Gangopadhyay remained in his car, his security personnel were observed trying to de-escalate the situation.
Supriyo also accused Gangopadhyay’s vehicle of frequently sounding the siren, which he claimed was inappropriate since, according to him, the MP’s car lacked proper identification. However, reports indicate that the car displayed a sign reading “MP from Tamluk.”
This incident recalls previous confrontations involving Gangopadhyay, including an altercation in October last year with TMC MP Kalyan Banerjee during a parliamentary committee meeting on the Waqf (Amendment) Bill.
In July of the same year, he also had a fiery exchange with Congress MP Gaurav Gogoi during his inaugural speech on the Union Budget, during which some of his remarks were later expunged from the record. The dispute erupted as Gangopadhyay was urged to conclude his speech, leading Gogoi to question him about comments he had previously made regarding Nathuram Godse, the assassin of Mahatma Gandhi.