Rajasthan BJP's Grievance Push: How Ministers Are Tackling Worker Complaints

Rajasthan's BJP government is holding special sessions to hear complaints from its party workers. Deputy Chief Minister Diya Kumari emphasized a new system with strict follow-ups every two days. She contrasted this with the previous Congress administration, which she claims ignored such concerns. The initiative aims to quickly resolve grassroots issues related to local development and civic matters.

Key Points: Diya Kumari, Kharra Lead BJP Worker Grievance Session in Rajasthan

  • Ministers conducted on-the-spot calls to officials for immediate issue resolution
  • Nearly 150 complaints were registered covering development works and administrative delays
  • The next session will be chaired by Agriculture and Energy Ministers on December 9
  • A strict 48-hour follow-up system has been instituted to monitor complaint progress
2 min read

Never was there any 'jan sunwai' under Congress: Rajasthan Dy CM

Rajasthan Deputy CM Diya Kumari and Minister Jhabar Singh Kharra address BJP worker complaints, promising 48-hour follow-ups and slamming previous Congress rule.

"For five years under Congress, workers’ concerns were ignored. In the BJP government, grievance redressal... is a priority. - Deputy CM Diya Kumari"

Jaipur, Dec 8

Rajasthan Deputy Chief Minister Diya Kumari and Urban Development & Housing Minister Jhabar Singh Kharra conducted a grievance redressal session for BJP workers from across Rajasthan at the state BJP headquarters on Monday.

BJP state Vice President Jyoti Mirdha and State General Secretary Kailash Meghwal were also present.

Kumari stated that a large number of cases from various districts were received, many of which have already been forwarded to respective departments for action.

She said that in several instances, officials were contacted on the spot to initiate immediate resolution.

She said the initiative - launched under the direction of BJP State President Madan Rathore and Chief Minister Bhajan Lal Sharma - would significantly speed up resolution of grassroots-level concerns.

“Our party workers are our strength. It is our commitment that every complaint is pursued until closure. Follow-up will be strictly monitored every 48 hours,” she said.

Targeting the previous government, she added, “For five years under Congress, workers’ concerns were ignored. In the BJP government, grievance redressal - whether for public or party workers - is a priority, and ministers conduct such hearings twice a week.”

Minister Jhabar Singh Kharra informed that nearly 150 workers presented complaints related to development works, encroachment, administrative delays, and other civic matters.

“These cases are being reviewed after obtaining reports from relevant departments,” he said.

Attacking the Congress, he said that if Congress wants municipal and panchayat elections without OBC reservation, they should openly admit it.

He claimed that reservation can only proceed after completion of due legal process, as mandated by the courts, and that the Backward Classes Commission is working according to procedure.

State Office Secretary Mukesh Pareek informed that the next worker grievance session will be held on Tuesday, December 9, from 11 AM to 1 PM, with Agriculture Minister Kirodi Lal Meena and Energy Minister Hira Lal Nagar presiding.

He added that BJP state vice president Sarita Geena and state general secretary Shravan Singh Bagdi will also be present.

He said that the workers may register grievances after a recommendation from their Mandal President, District Office Bearer, or State Office Bearer, and submission of the prescribed form.

- IANS

Share this article:

Reader Comments

P
Priya S
While the initiative sounds good, the political blame game is unnecessary. Every government should work for the people, not just their party workers. Let's see if common citizens get the same speedy grievance redressal.
V
Vikram M
Good to see a structured process. The 48-hour follow-up promise is ambitious. If they can maintain this discipline, it will set a new standard for political accountability in the state. Jai Rajasthan!
A
Ananya R
The comment on OBC reservation seems like a diversion. The article is about grievance sessions, why bring elections into it? Focus should be on solving the 150 complaints received, not scoring political points.
K
Karthik V
Twice a week *jan sunwai* by ministers is impressive if implemented properly. The real test will be in remote districts, not just at the state HQ. Hope they take this model to the block level.
S
Sarah B
Interesting to see the internal party mechanism. Requiring a recommendation from a party official to register a grievance though... could that prevent genuine issues from being raised by ordinary workers?

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Leave a Comment

Minimum 50 characters 0/50