Maharashtra Minister Bawankule Backs PM Modi’s Swadeshi Call for Self-Reliance

Maharashtra Minister Chandrashekhar Bawankule praised PM Modi’s appeal for adopting indigenous products, calling it a modern push for Swadeshi. Modi urged citizens to reduce foreign travel, gold imports, and fuel consumption to boost self-reliance amid global crises. Samajwadi Party chief Akhilesh Yadav criticized the appeal as an admission of government failure and questioned its timing after elections. Yadav argued the restrictions would spread fear and despair in trade and markets.

Key Points: Bawankule Backs Modi’s Swadeshi Call to Curb Foreign Imports

  • Minister Bawankule thanks PM Modi for Swadeshi call
  • Modi urges citizens to curb foreign travel, gold imports, fuel use
  • Opposition leader Akhilesh Yadav calls appeal an "admission of failure"
  • Yadav questions timing after elections, cites economic concerns
3 min read

"Call for 'Swadeshi": Maharashtra Minister Bawankule backs PM Modi's push to curb foreign imports in favour of local resources

Maharashtra Minister Bawankule backs PM Modi’s push for Swadeshi, urging Indians to adopt indigenous products and reduce foreign imports for economic growth.

"Rather than importing gold and silver from abroad, we can source them right here within our own nation. - Chandrashekhar Bawankule"

Pune, May 12

Maharashtra Minister Chandrashekhar Bawankule expressed his gratitude to Prime Minister Narendra Modi for his recent appeal to the country to adopt indigenous products. He stated that the call for self-reliance is essential for the country's economic growth and follows the ideals once set by Mahatma Gandhi.

Bawankule, while interacting with reporters, said, "I express my gratitude to PM Modi. The call he has issued to the nation is a call for 'Swadeshi' (indigenous self-reliance). Mahatma Gandhi, too, had frequently issued this very call to the country... Rather than importing gold and silver from abroad, we can source them right here within our own nation. Many people tend to conduct business with foreign entities. Thus, as the Prime Minister has stated, the path of 'Swadeshi' is the path that will lead to making India a golden nation..."

Prime Minister Modi had while addressing a gathering in Secunderabad on Sunday, urged citizens to prioritise work from home, cut fuel consumption, avoid foreign travel for a year, adopt Swadeshi products, reduce cooking oil use, shift to natural farming and curb gold purchases.

He said the government is making relentless efforts to ensure that the impact of the West Asia war crisis on citizens is kept to an absolute minimum and urged people to reduce consumption of imported products and avoid personal activities that incur expenditure in foreign exchange.

The PM said said a huge amount of the country's money also goes abroad on gold imports and urged people to postpone the purchase of gold until the situation returns to normal.

"I appeal to every citizen of my country to reduce the use of petrol-diesel as much as possible. Use the metro, make greater use of electric buses and public transport, and promote carpooling. Those who have a car should take more people along in one vehicle. Digital technology has now made so many things easy that technology's assistance will also be very beneficial for us. It is essential that priority be given to virtual meetings and work from home in both government and private offices," he said.

Opposition has targetted PM for his remarks.

Samajwadi Party chief Akhilesh Yadav yesterdayy alleged that Prime Minister's seven-point appeal to citizens in view of the ongoing West Asia crisis and to make India stronger and self-reliant was an "admission of failure" by the government, while also questioning the timing of the appeal after the elections.

In a post on X, Yadav wrote, "As soon as the elections ended, the 'crisis' came to mind! In fact, there's only one 'crisis' for the country, and its name is: 'BJP'.

"Questioning the government's economic management, Yadav said, "If so many restrictions had to be imposed, how will the 'jumla economy of five trillion dollars' ever come about? It seems the reins have completely slipped from the hands of the BJP government."

"The dollar is touching the skies, and the country's rupee is hurtling toward the depths," he added.

Yadav also questioned why the restrictions were announced only after the polls. He was referring to the BJP's extensive election campaign in West Bengal, Tamil Nadu, Assam, Keralam and Puducherry.

"Weren't the thousands of charter flights the BJP folks took during the elections flying on water? Weren't they staying in hotels, or cooking meals with photos of cylinders? Why didn't the BJP do their election campaigning just through video conferencing? Are all these restrictions only for the public?"

He stated that such appeals would "spread fear along with panic, unease, and despair in trade, business, and the markets, due to apprehensions of recession or inflation."

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
I agree with the spirit of the call, but implementing this overnight is not practical. Many local industries are not yet competitive in quality or cost. The government should first invest in R&D and infrastructure to make 'Made in India' truly world-class. Otherwise, it's just forcing hardship on common people. 😐
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Sarah B
As an NRI living abroad, I appreciate the sentiment but this feels like a way to divert attention from real economic issues like inflation and unemployment. Cutting gold imports won't help if people can't afford basic necessities. The opposition has a valid point about the timing of all this. 🤔
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Vikram M
Well said by Bawankule ji! Gandhi's Swadeshi movement transformed India during independence. Today, with rising global tensions, we need self-reliance more than ever. But why target individual consumption only? The government should also look at reducing its own imports of defence equipment and electronics. 🇮🇳💪
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Ananya R
The call to reduce petrol consumption and use public transport is good, but have they seen the state of our buses and metros? Many cities don't have proper public transport. Also, promoting work-from-home is fine for IT folks, but what about daily wagers, factory workers, and small businesses? This seems disconnected from ground reality. 😕
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Michael C
Being an economist, I can see both sides. Reducing imports is good for the current account deficit, but asking people to stop buying gold — which is deeply tied to our culture and savings — is a tough sell. Maybe target luxury imports first? And yes, the opposition's hypocrisy meter is justified given BJP's own lavish campaign spending. 😅

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