‘Rejection System, Not Selection System’: Rahul Gandhi Assails India’s Exam Culture Ahead Of NEET Retest
‘Rejection System, Not Selection System’: Rahul Gandhi Assails India’s Exam Culture Ahead Of NEET Retest Written By, Last Updated: June 17, 2026, 23:48 IST The
‘Rejection System, Not Selection System’: Rahul Gandhi Assails India’s Exam Culture Ahead Of NEET Retest Written By, Last Updated: June 17, 2026, 23:48 IST The Congress leader was addressing thousands of job aspirants and coaching students at the 'Chhatron Ki Goonj' (Echo of Students) mega rally in Rajasthan's Kota The high-octane rally took place just days before the scheduled NEET-UG re-examination on June 21 (after the original May 3 test was officially cancelled following a massive nationwide question paper leak scandal). Image/PTI Launching a sharp critique against the structure of India’s competitive examination landscape, Leader of the Opposition in the Lok Sabha Rahul Gandhi described the current mechanism as a “rejection system" rather than a selection system. Addressing thousands of job aspirants and coaching students at the “Chhatron Ki Goonj" (Echo of Students) mega rally in Rajasthan’s Kota on Wednesday, the Congress leader argued that the intense pressure built into the educational framework is systematically crushing the individual dreams and mental well-being of the nation’s youth. Gandhi used the platform—the first stop in a planned series of nationwide student conventions—to highlight the astronomical financial exploitation of middle-class families.
Citing detailed expenditure estimates, he stated that families of Eligibility cum Entrance Test (NEET) aspirants collectively spend an estimated Rs 1.32 lakh crore annually on commercial coaching, accommodation, and institutional fees. This figure, Gandhi pointed out, is nearly equivalent to the union government’s entire formal allocation for education. “Our current education system pressures, stresses, suppresses, and crushes its children. It does not nurture individual dreams or respect the diverse professional paths that young minds actually want to pursue," he said. ‘Extortion Machine Built on Systemic Vulnerabilities’ Expanding his critique to include five premier examinations—the Staff Selection Commission (SSC), Union Public Service Commission (UPSC), Railway Recruitment Board (RRB), Joint Entrance Examination (JEE), and NEET—Gandhi alleged that total private student spending reaches a staggering Rs 3.5 lakh crore annually, or the equivalent of the combined budgets allocated by the Centre to the five ministries dealing with women and child development, labour, education, health and science. He termed the hyper-commercialised coaching ecosystem an “extortion machine" that yields minimum assurances of actual employment, especially given the continuous shadow of delayed recruitment and examination paper leaks. The convention, held at the Shri Ram Rangmanch in Kota’s Dussehra Ground, deliberately positioned students on centre stage.
