Saturday, November 1, 2025

A Bold Look at Karnataka’s Unfulfilled Promises: Compelling 7% Reality

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The recent review by CIVIC Bengaluru has painted a sobering picture of governance in Karnataka, concluding that the current government has fulfilled less than 7% of its election manifesto promises. At a time when public faith in political commitments is under intense scrutiny, the findings have ignited debate across political, administrative, and civil society circles. The report asserts that despite tall claims and ambitious declarations, the on-ground execution remains disproportionately low, indicating an uneasy gap between political promises and public delivery. This revelation has compelled citizens and experts alike to question decision-making priorities, administrative capacity, and the broader narrative of accountability within the State.

The study, published following a meticulous review of the government’s performance over the past year, categorises assurances under sectors such as education, health, infrastructure, women empowerment, energy, and housing. The report suggests that most of the progress is concentrated in welfare schemes previously promoted as campaign centrepieces, while more systemic reforms associated with governance, transparency, and institutional strengthening have progressed marginally or not at all. This disparity has renewed questions about whether election manifestos serve as realistic blueprints for governance or merely persuasive declarations aimed at winning public approval.

CIVIC Bengaluru, known for its sustained activism on urban governance and rights-based approaches, emphasises that the State must demonstrate measurable outcomes on its promises. The organisation insists that fulfilment should include both the announcement of schemes and the sustainable delivery of services to target communities. This benchmark, it argues, is critical to avoid symbolism replacing substantive action. The current government, however, has defended its pace as a realistic response to economic limitations and unexpected fiscal burdens that disrupted annual planning. The debate, therefore, oscillates between two positions — civic groups demanding quantifiable progress and the government asserting pragmatic gradualism.

The review particularly highlights severe lag in infrastructure-related commitments, including road upgrades, affordable housing, rural connectivity, and public mobility solutions. These concerns have resonated strongly among residents of both rural and urban Karnataka, who had looked forward to improvements that would ease long-standing challenges around commute, sanitation, water supply, and settlement security. Similarly, commitments related to public health infrastructure, medical personnel deployment, district-level facilities expansion, and insurance coverage remain far from completion. Despite broader welfare schemes gaining visibility, the absence of deeper reforms has caused growing scepticism.

Another major factor weighing against manifesto delivery is the State’s precarious financial situation. The government’s fiscal narrative includes rising expenditure obligations owing to guarantees and social welfare expansions. Critics argue that while guarantees offer immediate support to vulnerable households, they also draw funds away from development-oriented structural reforms, thereby compromising long-term outcomes. CIVIC’s analysis suggests that the State has struggled to strike a balance between short-term popularity measures and long-term development demands. Government representatives, however, maintain that guarantees form the foundational pillar of equitable governance.

Public education, one of the most important sectors identified in the report, shows only incremental improvement. While some schools have seen increased budgetary allocations and access to digital tools, the promises related to transforming government schools into equitable and competitive learning spaces remain under-accomplished. Teacher vacancies, availability of subject experts, and classroom infrastructure gaps persist. The report notes that bridging these gaps is essential in offering students better upward mobility. Meanwhile, higher education institutions are still awaiting promised reforms aimed at skill-building, research funding, and employability programmes.CIVIC review finds Karnataka govt. fulfilled less than 7% of manifesto  promises - The Hindu

Healthcare commitments have shown limited progress as well, aside from marginal expansions in coverage and announcements around district hospital capacity. The government’s promise to improve rural health infrastructure has not translated into tangible outcomes at the pace expected. The report indicates that the shortage of specialists and trained personnel continues to be a significant barrier, with recruitment plans seeing bureaucratic delays. While schemes aimed at maternal and preventive health have seen gradual improvement, the absence of comprehensive policy execution restricts meaningful transformation.

GROWING CONCERNS OVER CIVIC INFRASTRUCTURE AND SOCIAL DELIVERY

Urban and semi-urban localities have felt the impact of lag in civic infrastructure delivery, where expectations were shaped around improved municipal governance, waste management, and water access. The government’s push for scientific waste processing has yet to see uniform adoption across districts, resulting in persistent landfill dependence. Similarly, promises concerning clean drinking water supply appear to be advancing slowly, as infrastructure pipelines remain inadequate and several municipalities face chronic shortages. Public frustration has intensified, especially among communities that believed infrastructure upgrades would be immediate after electoral campaigns.

Transport infrastructure is also among the sectors where fulfilment has been limited. While some expansion of public roadways and intercity connectivity has been announced, the pace of execution remains markedly slow. In urban spaces, mobility challenges continue to aggravate, with poor last-mile connectivity and insufficient bus fleets restricting public transport usage. A widely hoped-for overhaul of the public mobility system thus remains distant, raising questions about the prioritisation of capital expenditure. The review points out that these shortcomings feed directly into economic challenges, especially for working populations that depend heavily on transportation.

Promises around women empowerment are yet another significant arena where progress falls short. While government guarantees and financial assistance programmes have supported vulnerable women, broader reforms envisioning institutional empowerment are still largely dormant. Proposed policies meant to improve workplace conditions, provide safety infrastructure, expand entrepreneurship support, and enhance representation within governance mechanisms have reached limited operational stages. Civil society organisations argue that comprehensive empowerment requires systemic change beyond subsidies and support figures, demanding deeper engagement with rights frameworks and long-term planning.

In the rural sector, expectations around agricultural institutions, irrigation, and farm support systems have not been fully met. While some crop procurement and subsidy initiatives were launched, the promised structural reforms that would better equip farmers to face climate and market-driven uncertainties have not progressed meaningfully. Farmer organisations argue that timely procurement, storage facility expansion, water allocation efficiency, and market linkages must be prioritised over short-term subsidy-based relief. The report reflects similar viewpoints, calling on the government to embrace forward-looking policies that address recurring agricultural distress.

Housing and urban land reforms also rank among the least executed domains. With aspirations to create affordable housing for lower and middle-income segments, the manifesto raised hopes for increased access to safe living conditions. Yet, the report highlights that allocation, construction, and land identification have seen negligible improvements. Urban tenancy reforms, rental housing support, and land rights assurances have similarly progressed slowly. Experts argue that inadequate planning mechanisms and delays in project tendering create major obstacles to delivery, particularly when multiple stakeholder agencies must coordinate seamlessly.

CIVIC’s report also comments on governance transparency — one of the fundamental promises in the manifesto. It points out that while several announcements were made encouraging participatory governance and decentralised planning, actual implementation is limited. Gram Panchayats, city wards, and local committees report insufficient clarity on resource allocation and decision-making procedures. Moreover, limited public access to real-time data continues to restrict citizen oversight. The report emphasises that without institutional transparency, developmental promises risk becoming symbolic rather than material.

The government, however, contends that it has made substantial progress across welfare fronts and insists that most structural transformations require time. Officials argue that major initiatives have already laid strong foundations, especially through guarantee schemes aimed at subsidising essential needs. They add that fiscal limitations and administrative restructuring have impacted timelines. According to government representatives, the 7% fulfilment figure must be contextualised within processes underway rather than treated as an endpoint. They describe the critique as an incomplete reflection of their intentions.

Civil society groups remain unconvinced, reiterating the need for measurable results within defined timeframes. They argue that the manifesto is not merely a visionary document but a public contract that sets expectations and must be honoured. For them, delays signify misalignment between citizen needs and administrative priorities. They assert that although welfare guarantees are valuable, long-term growth depends on solid institutional reforms. This fundamental divide between civil society expectations and government responses fuels the ongoing debate.Karnataka govt announces state wide “close down” for 14 days - Telangana  Today

TIME PRESSURE AND THE ROAD AHEAD

Expert opinions featured in the review offer nuanced perspectives on the State’s situation. Economists comment that while fiscal limitations are real, prioritisation choices remain political. They note that a government’s ability to enact major reforms depends heavily on its commitment to revising administrative structures and ensuring compliance mechanisms. Development scholars, meanwhile, emphasise that democratic accountability relies on visible delivery. Unless the State demonstrates tangible progress, mistrust risks becoming entrenched. They advise the government to accelerate delayed projects and re-examine execution strategies.

The timeline detail included in the report maps yearly milestones and unmet targets, illustrating where progress has stalled. Among projected reforms, significant commitments around environmental sustainability remain incomplete. The manifesto included measures to improve forest cover, promote renewable energy, and enhance climate resilience, yet these goals remain on hold. Climate advocates note that failure to prioritise environmental reforms risks long-term setbacks for the state, which already faces erratic rainfall, heat stress, and water scarcity. For them, environmental promises are not supplementary but core to economic and social stability.Skill Development Entrepreneurship and Livelihood Department - Index

Looking ahead, experts argue that course correction is still possible. They recommend that the State adopt more targeted prioritisation, allocate adequate budgets for structural projects, and improve inter-departmental coordination. Civil society organisations urge the government to systematically publish progress reports, enabling citizens to monitor implementation across sectors. They also recommend reformulating some schemes to align better with ground realities. The government acknowledges these suggestions but maintains that guarantees must remain a central pillar of governance.

Follow: Karnataka Government

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