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Vaishnaw trashes Zuckerberg’s claim on India election result

Facebook founder claimed that after the Covid-19 pandemic, most incumbent governments, including the one in India, lost elections in 2024
Mark Zuckerberg. File photo

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Union minister Ashwini Vaishnaw countered Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg on Monday on his claim that after the Covid-19 pandemic, most incumbent governments, including the one in India, lost elections in 2024, asserting that his statement was "factually incorrect".

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In a post on X, Vaishnaw said that as the world's largest democracy, India conducted the 2024 general election involving more than 640 million (64 crore) voters.

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"People of India reaffirmed their trust in NDA led by PM Narendra Modi.

"Zuckerberg's claim that most incumbent governments, including India in 2024 elections, lost post-COVID is factually incorrect," the information and broadcasting minister noted.

Zuckerberg had reportedly claimed in a podcast that in elections around the world in 2024, most incumbent governments, including the one in India, lost power.

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"From free food for 800 million, 2.2 billion free vaccines, and aid to nations worldwide during COVID, to leading India as the fastest-growing major economy, PM Modi's decisive 3rd-term victory is a testament to good governance and public trust," Vaishnaw asserted.

Tagging Meta, he said it is "disappointing" to see misinformation from Zuckerberg himself. "Let's uphold facts and credibility," Vaishnaw said.

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