Mounting pressure on the state government, all four Communist Party of India (CPI) ministers in the Cabinet threatened to boycott the state cabinet meeting on Wednesday (29th October) following the state government’s decision to sign the Centre’s Pradhan Mantri Schools for Rising India (PM SHRI) scheme without prior consultation. As a result, the session was shifted to the evening. This was preceded by CM Pinarayi Vijayan’s attempt to resolve the rift with the CPI ministers by convening a meeting with the CPI state secretary Binoy Viswam and CPI ministers in Alappuzha, but the talks did not result in a solution.
Why the Kerala government took a U-turn to sign the scheme
The reason behind the state government’s U-turn on the scheme was that the Centre withheld education funds worth ₹1,000 crore meant for the state after the latter refused to sign the scheme. Therefore, to secure the funds, the state government went ahead and signed the scheme without obtaining the consent of the state cabinet.
The Central Government runs an umbrella programme named Samagra Shiksha, under which states and UTs receive education funds that have been linked to the signing of the PM SHRI MoU. Since Kerala, West Bengal and Tamil Nadu were the only states that refused to sign, 2024-25 funds were not allocated to them. On the other hand, states including Madhya Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan and others received thousands of crores under the same scheme.
The Central Government maintained its stance that all states must align with the NEP and PM SHRI to ensure uniform national standards. Insistence on compliance as a prerequisite to the fund release was intended to reinforce accountability and avoid politically selective implementation of central schemes.

