Bhagirath Choudhary defends ₹99 lakh farm subsidy from his own Ministry
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Union Minister of State for Agriculture and Ajmer MP Bhagirath Choudhary is facing a political firestorm after reports emerged that he received a government subsidy of ₹99.03 lakh for a commercial cucumber cultivation project under a scheme run by the National Horticulture Board (NHB) — an autonomous body that functions under the very Ministry he heads, where he also serves as ex-officio Vice-Chairman. The controversy, which surfaced on 28 June, has drawn sharp Opposition fire over what critics are calling a textbook conflict of interest.
The Subsidy and the Project
The grant was sanctioned under the NHB's Development of Commercial Horticulture scheme for a high-tech polyhouse project at Choudhary's private farm in Peeh village, Didwana-Kuchaman district, Rajasthan. According to reports, the total project cost stands at ₹1.99 crore. Of this, Choudhary invested ₹49.8 lakh from personal funds, while ₹1.49 crore was financed through an HDFC Bank loan. The ₹99.03 lakh subsidy was directly credited to that loan account after final approval in March 2026.
Notably, the project reportedly received in-principle approval within just 14 days of the application being submitted in April 2025. The minister's aides have pointed out that Choudhary first applied for the scheme in 2018, but that application was rejected due to incomplete technical documentation — a timeline they say demonstrates adherence to due process.
What the Minister Said
Speaking to reporters in Ajmer, Choudhary dismissed the allegations outright. 'What is wrong with it?' he asked, asserting that the benefit was sanctioned strictly under the rules and that he had not misused his official position. 'I am the son of a farmer and have been farming since childhood. Should I stop farming simply because I became an MP or a Union Minister?' he said.
Choudhary maintained that the NHB scheme is available to all eligible farmers across the country and that his farm project details — including the bank loan and subsidy amount — are publicly displayed on an information board at the farm. He added that Agriculture department officials have inspected the project on multiple occasions, and characterised the controversy as a 'politically motivated' campaign aimed at damaging his reputation.
Opposition Escalates Attack
Former Rajasthan Chief Minister Ashok Gehlot was unsparing in his criticism, calling it 'yet another disturbing example of institutionalised corruption and conflict of interest under the Narendra Modi government.' Gehlot questioned how a Union Minister of State for Agriculture could receive a subsidy of nearly ₹1 crore for his own farm under a scheme administered by his own Ministry.
'While ordinary farmers struggle through endless bureaucratic hurdles for even modest assistance, BJP Ministers and those in positions of influence appear to have privileged access to government benefits worth crores,' Gehlot said. He also invoked Prime Minister Modi's oft-cited pledge — 'Neither will I take a bribe, nor will I let anyone else take one' — and questioned why Modi had remained silent on the matter.
The broader Opposition argument is that even if the subsidy does not violate any statutory provision, the ethical dimension remains troubling: the beneficiary oversees the very agency that sanctioned his grant.
Political Context
The controversy has acquired added weight because it comes amid speculation over a possible Union Cabinet reshuffle. Critics argue that the timing raises questions about accountability at a moment when the government is under scrutiny on multiple fronts. This is not the first time a Minister's dual role as a scheme beneficiary and its administrative overseer has been questioned — similar conflicts of interest have surfaced in state governments across party lines in recent years.
With the Opposition demanding a formal inquiry and the minister standing firm, the episode is unlikely to fade quickly from the political discourse.