Among the six ways suggested, a key one was considering a resident anyone who had been employed in the state or set up a business there over the previous 30 years, effectively making 1985 as the cut-off year. Predictably, tribal constituencies objected to these relaxations. The issue is likely to create more roiling controversy, given the government’s role as a major employer in a state where private investment has been subdued. But from Maharashtra to Andhra Pradesh and Haryana, the effort to trend towards provincialism in jobs and reservations will inflict considerable damage on India’s labour market and weaken the delicate mechanisms of federalism that allow any Indian citizen to seek employment anywhere in the country.
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