Punjab Congress Slams Centre: How MGNREGA Scrapping Snatches a Legal Right from the Poor

The Congress party in Punjab has launched a fierce attack on the central government for scrapping the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act. State party chief Amarinder Singh Raja Warring, alongside AICC's Supriya Shrinate, condemned the move as a systematic attack on the country's poor and marginalized sections. They criticized Prime Minister Narendra Modi's historical disdain for the scheme and raised concerns over the increased financial burden placed on states. The leaders highlighted the act's success in poverty alleviation and demanded a constructive response from the Punjab government.

Key Points: Congress Slams Modi Govt for Scrapping MGNREGA Rights in Punjab

  • Congress leaders call the MGNREGA scrapping a systematic attack on marginalized communities
  • PM Modi is accused of having a deep aversion to the job guarantee scheme from its inception
  • The new law raises the state's financial burden from a 10% to a 40% matching grant
  • The scheme is praised for reducing rural poverty by 26% and transforming rural economies
2 min read

Centre snatches legal right, guarantee of poor: Punjab Congress

Punjab Congress accuses the Centre of attacking the poor by scrapping MGNREGA, a legal guarantee for jobs. Leaders Warring and Shrinate condemn the move.

"It was a systematic attack on the poor, the Dalits, the tribals, the backwards and the women of the country. - Amarinder Singh Raja Warring & Supriya Shrinate"

Chandigarh, Dec 20

The Congress in Punjab on Saturday slammed the Centre government for scrapping the rights-based Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (MGNREGA), saying it had snatched the legal right and guarantee of the poor and the marginalised people of the country.

State Congress president Amarinder Singh Raja Warring, along with AICC Department of Social Media and Digital Platforms Chairperson Supriya Shrinate, said here that it was a systematic attack on the poor, the Dalits, the tribals, the backwards and the women of the country.

Warring said Prime Minister Narendra Modi had a deep aversion towards the MGNREGA from day one and would often refer to it scornfully.

He particularly referred to increasing the state allocation from 10 to 40 per cent under the new law VB-G RAM G, which has replaced the MGNREGA. He said the Aam Aadmi Party government in Punjab had already failed in implementing MGNREGA, even when it was supposed to provide just a 10 per cent matching grant.

He asked, “How can it provide a 40 per cent matching grant?”

Referring to Chief Minister Bhagwant Mann’s announcement of convening a special session of the Assembly on the issue, Warring hoped that he (the CM) would come up with some positive and constructive proposal as to how to counter the Central government.

Speaking on the issue, Supriya Shrinate described it as an attack by Prime Minister Modi on the marginalised sections of society who have been exploited for generations, like the Dalits, the tribals, the backwards and the women who, she said, got maximum work under the MGNREGA scheme.

She pointed out that it was the demand-based right where every person could demand 100 days’ work as a matter of right.

She said MGNREGA had a provision that if the government could not provide work to the person, she or he would be compensated financially. The senior Congress leader maintained that MGNREGA had transformed the rural economy, helped poverty alleviation in rural areas by reducing rural poverty by 26 per cent and improving rural employment.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
While I understand the concerns, maybe there is a need for reform? The article mentions a new scheme. If it increases state allocation, perhaps it aims to make states more accountable. But transparency on how the new system will work is crucial.
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Aditya G
Warring has a point about Punjab's AAP government. They couldn't manage the 10% grant properly, how will they handle 40%? This seems like political blame game from both sides while the poor suffer. First fix the implementation at state level!
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Priyanka N
As a woman from a rural background, I've seen MGNREGA empower so many women in my community. It gave them financial independence. Scrapping the legal right is a major setback for women's empowerment. Hope the special session in Punjab brings a good solution.
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Karthik V
The 26% poverty reduction stat is powerful. Why fix something that isn't broken? This feels like an ideological move rather than a practical one. The guarantee of work was the soul of the scheme. Without it, it's just another government program that can be ignored.
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Michael C
Interesting to see federal dynamics play out here. Increasing state share to 40% could be a double-edged sword. It might lead to better tailored local solutions, or it might just let the Centre off the hook for funding. The proof will be in the implementation.

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