Pilot Demands Probe Into Rajasthan LDC Exam Integrity Row
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Congress leader and party general secretary Sachin Pilot on Monday, July 6, 2026 demanded a fair and time-bound investigation into allegations of paper leaks and compromised integrity during the Rajasthan Lower Division Clerk (LDC) recruitment examination, calling the complaints raised by candidates 'extremely serious.'
Context
Posting on X, Pilot said the complaints — including allegations that question papers were passed out through windows during the ongoing exam — cast a large shadow over the transparency of the system. Translating his post: 'राजस्थान में LDC परीक्षा के दौरान अभ्यर्थियों द्वारा उठाई गई शिकायतें... बेहद गंभीर हैं' ('The complaints raised by candidates during the LDC exam in Rajasthan are extremely serious'). He added that if doubts exist, they must be resolved in time, and that incidents of copying and paper leaks generate 'despair and frustration among the youth.'
The LDC examination is conducted by the Rajasthan Subordinate and Ministerial Services Selection Board (RSMSSB) for clerical posts in state government departments. Thousands of aspirants appear for these tests, making their credibility a matter of significant public interest.
Policy Backdrop
Rajasthan has a documented history of examination irregularities in state-level recruitment drives. The 2021 REET (Rajasthan Eligibility Examination for Teachers) was cancelled after widespread paper leak allegations triggered protests across the state, forcing the government to reschedule the test entirely.
Allegations of compromised exams have recurred across clerical, teacher, and police recruitment tests in multiple Indian states, eroding candidate trust and prompting repeated political demands for systemic reform. Pilot specifically called for a 'fair and time-bound inquiry' — 'निष्पक्ष एवं समयबद्ध जांच' — framing the issue as one of institutional credibility rather than partisan politics.
Stakeholders and Impact
The primary stakeholders are the lakhs of young job aspirants who prepare for years for state government clerical posts, often foregoing other opportunities. Any cancellation or re-examination imposes financial and psychological costs on this group, which skews young and often comes from smaller towns and rural Rajasthan.
The RSMSSB, as the conducting body, faces institutional scrutiny whenever irregularity allegations surface. The Rajasthan government — currently led by the Bharatiya Janata Party — will face pressure to either defend the examination's conduct or announce a credible independent review. Opposition figures like Pilot have historically used such episodes to highlight perceived administrative lapses.
What's Next
The key development to watch is whether the Rajasthan government constitutes a Special Investigation Team (SIT) or an independent inquiry committee in response to the mounting complaints. Any announcement on the rescheduling or cancellation of the LDC examination will directly affect the recruitment calendar for state clerical services.
Pilot's intervention signals that the issue is likely to be raised in political forums and could intensify pressure on the state administration to act visibly and swiftly. If the government delays a credible response, the episode risks feeding into a broader narrative about examination governance that has dogged several states in recent years.