Gowda and Vajpayee’s exchanges in Parliament mostly concerned communalism, the farm economy, water disputes, the economy in general and governance, in the same order of importance. George Fernandes, a minister in Vajpayee’s cabinet and a fellow Kannadiga, was also a cause of conflict between the two many a times. On all the topics, Gowda spoke with his own field reports, assessments of experts, legal inputs, data points and common sense. He made thorough use of the Parliament library, but never brandished his reading, or blended it with panache into his arguments. But if somebody questioned him, he would surprise them with his depth of understanding. In his first-ever session, and first-ever speech in Parliament, in July 1991, when the motion of thanks to the President’s address was being discussed, Gowda started speaking on the Union government’s plan to notify the interim order of the Cauvery Tribunal. Mani Shankar Aiyar, Mayiladuthurai MP, objected: ‘Sir, I am on a point of order. Is it in order for a member to devote, as he threatens to do, his entire speech to a subject which has not been mentioned in the President’s address?’ Gowda responded: ‘The President’s address makes a mention about the development of irrigation . . . Though I am a new member to this house, I know that anything can be discussed during the debate on the residential address, within the ambit of rules framed by this very house. I know my limitations. Though I am a new entrant in this house, being a member in the state legislature for more than twenty years (actually, close to thirty years in 1991), I know my limitations.’