HomeNewsOpinionOPINION | Karnataka’s anti-RSS push and the court verdict Congress forgot

OPINION | Karnataka’s anti-RSS push and the court verdict Congress forgot

RSSFACTS: The Madhya Pradesh High Court quashed restrictions on central government employees' involvement with the RSS, recognising its apolitical social contributions and questioning the basis of past anti-secular claims, vindicating its nationalist role

October 17, 2025 / 14:10 IST
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RSS
The detractors of the RSS need to recall these observations.

(RSSFACTS is a column that demystifies the functioning, organisational structure and ideology of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh.)

The recent attempts by the Congress government in Karnataka to target the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) are not entirely new. In the past also Congress governments have targeted the RSS activities. In this context, it would be appropriate to look at the recent judicial intervention that might indicate how all this could end in a fiasco for Congress.

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Madhya Pradesh High Court Case: A Landmark Verdict

In the Purushottam Gupta v. Union of India case, the Madhya Pradesh High Court dealt with the issue of restrictions on central government employees from being members of or participating in the activities of the RSS. These restrictions were imposed through Office Memorandums (OMs) issued by the Congress governments at the Centre in 1966, 1970, and 1980.
In its verdict on 25 July, 2024, the MP High Court not only quashed these restrictions but made some significant observations. These observations are necessary to ensure that voluntary organisations working in the public and national interest are not unjustly restricted by executive instructions or OMs, and to ensure similar situations do not arise in the future.