Friday, February 6, 2026
News

"Is it RTI's turn to get murdered?": Mallikarjun Kharge slams Modi Government over Economic Survey's call to "re-examine" RTI Act

SocialTwist Tell-a-Friend    Print this Page   COMMENT

New Delhi | January 30, 2026 3:20:13 PM IST
Congress President Mallikarjun Kharge launched a sharp attack on the Prime Minister Modi-led government over the Economic Survey 2025-26's call to "re-examine" the Right to Information (RTI) Act, accusing it of systematically weakening one of India's most powerful transparency laws.

In a post on X, Kharge said the Survey's suggestions, including a possible ministerial veto on disclosures and shielding service records, transfers and staff reports of bureaucrats, reflected the government's intent to dilute public accountability. "The Economic Survey has called for 're-examination' of the RTI Act... After killing MGNREGA, is it RTI's turn to get murdered?" he asked.

https://x.com/kharge/status/2017143700615549005

Listing what he termed a pattern of erosion since 2014, Kharge said more than 26,000 RTI cases were pending as of 2025. He alleged that amendments introduced in 2019 allowed the Centre to control the tenure and pay of Information Commissioners, weakening their independence. Kharge also criticised the Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023, claiming it gutted the RTI Act's public interest clause and enabled the government to use privacy as a shield against scrutiny.

He further pointed out that until December 2025, the Central Information Commission functioned without a Chief Information Commissioner, marking the seventh such vacancy in 11 years. Kharge also highlighted the killing of over 100 RTI activists since 2014 and accused the BJP of failing to implement the Whistleblowers Protection Act, 2014, passed during the Congress-led UPA regime.

The Economic Survey 2025-26, however, said the RTI ACT may require re-examination not to dilute its spirit but to align it with global best practices. It suggests exempting brainstorming notes and draft papers until decisions are finalised, protecting confidential service records from "casual" requests, and exploring a narrowly defined ministerial veto subject to parliamentary oversight.

The Survey stressed that these were suggestions for debate and reiterated that the RTI Act's core purpose remains promoting transparency, containing corruption and enhancing public participation in democracy.

"The Act is best understood not as an end in itself, but as a means to strengthen democracy. The wiser path is to keep it anchored to this original aim: enabling citizens to demand accountability for decisions that affect them, while also ensuring that space for candid deliberation and respect for privacy remain protected. That balance between openness and candour is what will keep the RTI Act true to its purpose," the Survey said. (ANI)

 
  LATEST COMMENTS ()
POST YOUR COMMENT
Comments Not Available
 
POST YOUR COMMENT
 
 
TRENDING TOPICS
 
 
CITY NEWS
MORE CITIES
 
 
INDIA WORLD ASIA
Kerala: Opposition MLAs protest outside ...
14-year-old boy succumbs to stab injurie...
'Be it trade deal with EU, recent deal w...
MSME Ministry strengthens industrial eco...
Union Home and Cooperation Minister Amit...
Murder convict arrested 13 years after r...
More...    
 
 Top Stories
Govt establishes 100 5G Use Case La... 
Kristen Stewart steps in to save on... 
Diva, Jeet Adani mark one year of A... 
Timothee Chalamet's 'Marty Supreme'... 
Shotgun National Selection Trials: ... 
Trailer of 'Young Sherlock' out now... 
Kerry Washington to feature in Jaum... 
England Test captain Ben Stokes suf...