Chhattisgarh Minister Rajesh Agrawal Money Allegation: Congress Viral Video Strategy — Truth, Politics or Character Assassination?
Digital Desk
Congress targets Chhattisgarh Minister Rajesh Agrawal with money allegation viral video. Is this accountability journalism or political mudslinging?
A Video, An Allegation and a Minister in the Crosshairs
In the fast-moving world of Indian political warfare, few weapons are more potent in 2026 than a viral video. And the Chhattisgarh Congress has deployed exactly that weapon — this time targeting Tourism, Culture and Religious Trusts Minister Rajesh Agrawal with a money allegation video that has set Raipur's political corridors buzzing.
The video, shared widely on WhatsApp and social media channels associated with the state Congress unit, contains allegations linking the minister to financial impropriety. Congress has framed it as a window into the money-and-power culture allegedly thriving within the Vishnu Deo Sai government. The BJP, predictably, has pushed back — calling it a fabricated, politically motivated attack designed to destabilise a minister who has been a thorn in Congress's side since the day he defeated their most prominent Surguja leader.
But between the competing narratives, ordinary citizens of Chhattisgarh deserve a clear-eyed look at what we actually know — and what questions must still be answered.
Who Is Rajesh Agrawal? The Man Behind the Controversy
To understand why Congress has chosen Rajesh Agrawal as a target, you first need to understand who he is and why he matters in Chhattisgarh's power structure.
Agrawal is the MLA from Ambikapur in Surguja district — the man who, in the 2023 Assembly elections, pulled off one of the most stunning upsets in recent Chhattisgarh political history by defeating senior Congress leader and former Deputy Chief Minister T.S. Singh Deo by just 94 votes. Wikipedia
That single victory carries enormous symbolic weight. Ambikapur was not just any constituency — it was T.S. Singh Deo's fortress, the seat from which he had built his political identity over decades. Agrawal had originally been a Congress member himself. He quit the party in 2017 after falling out with the Congress organisation, subsequently joined the BJP, and then toppled the very leader who represented everything he had once been a part of. Wikipedia
Notably, at the time of the 2023 elections, no criminal cases had been registered against Agrawal — earning him a reputation as a politician with a clean public image. The Free Press Journal He currently serves as Chhattisgarh's Minister for Tourism, Culture, Religious Trusts and Endowments in Chief Minister Vishnu Deo Sai's cabinet. Business Standard
This is a man who won against the odds, carries a clean electoral record, and holds a significant portfolio. For Congress, he represents both a personal insult — the man who took down their star — and a political opportunity, if allegations can be made to stick.
The Video Strategy: How Congress Is Fighting Back
The Congress party in Chhattisgarh has been in deep political wilderness since its 2023 defeat. Former Chief Minister Bhupesh Baghel remains active but is himself fighting the Enforcement Directorate in the state's high-profile liquor scam case.
The Chhattisgarh liquor scam — under active investigation by the ED and the Anti-Corruption Bureau — involves multiple politicians, officials, and businessmen, with allegations of commission from distilleries, counterfeit hologram sales, and illegal revenue collection through manipulated supply zones. Business Standard Congress needs to change the narrative — and fast.
The viral video targeting Rajesh Agrawal is part of a carefully calibrated counter-offensive. In recent weeks, Congress has also attacked the BJP government over the opium farming scandal in Durg and Balrampur, over the LPG crisis, and over what it describes as administrative failure across the state.
On the opium issue, state Minister Rajesh Agrawal himself had responded directly to Congress's allegations, asserting that the government is continuously taking action against those involved in the drug trade and that no one will be spared regardless of political affiliation. Twitter
Now that same minister finds himself at the centre of a money allegation video — and the timing, coming in the middle of the state's budget session, is unlikely to be coincidental.
What the BJP Is Saying — And Why It Matters
The BJP's response to the viral video has been swift and categorical: this is political character assassination, nothing more.
Party leaders in Raipur have pointed to Agrawal's clean electoral record, his declared assets of approximately ₹10 crore at the time of the 2023 election, and his record of constituency work in Ambikapur as evidence that Congress is manufacturing a controversy. Agrawal's supporters note that his entry into the BJP and his subsequent appointment to the Sai cabinet came after years of grassroots work — and that his win over T.S. Singh Deo was a genuine democratic verdict, not the product of money power. The Free Press Journal
The broader BJP argument is also worth noting: that Congress, stung by the ED investigation into the liquor scam and facing internal divisions — illustrated by the photograph politics controversy surrounding former minister Jaisingh Agrawal's birthday poster, where Bhupesh Baghel's image was conspicuously absent Deccan Herald — is desperately seeking to shift media attention away from its own troubles.
The Real Test: What Accountability Demands Now
Political allegation videos are a feature of modern Indian democracy — but they are only as valuable as the accountability they trigger. Here is what this controversy demands, regardless of which side is right:
- An independent and transparent inquiry into the specific money allegations contained in the viral video, conducted outside the direct control of either the state government or the Congress party.
- The minister must respond on record — not through party spokespersons, but directly and in detail — addressing each specific allegation in the video.
- The Congress must provide verifiable evidence to back the video's claims, not just political rhetoric. Viral videos without corroboration are not accountability — they are noise.
- If the video is found to be fabricated or selectively edited, those responsible for creating and spreading it must face consequences under existing defamation and election law provisions.
Why This Story Is Bigger Than One Minister
The Rajesh Agrawal money allegation controversy is a microcosm of Chhattisgarh's political reality in 2026. The state is navigating multiple simultaneous crises: an LPG shortage, an opium farming scandal, a budget session dominated by opposition disruptions, and a ruling party trying to prove governance credentials while fighting off one allegation after another.
In the ongoing budget session, Congress MLAs have already alleged bias in CSR fund allocation, questioned the collector's functioning, and forced the government into uncomfortable positions — with former CM Baghel pointedly asking what the purpose of being a minister is if you cannot even direct your own district collector. Karmayog
The money allegation video against Rajesh Agrawal fits this larger pattern of sustained opposition pressure. Whether it represents genuine accountability or targeted political destabilisation is a question that only a credible investigation — not a social media debate — can answer.
Viral Videos Cannot Replace Real Accountability
In the age of WhatsApp forwards and YouTube clips, viral videos have become the first weapon of political warfare in India. They are fast, emotionally potent, and almost impossible to contain once released.
But India's democracy deserves better than trial by viral video. Minister Rajesh Agrawal — a first-generation BJP politician who built his career from the ground up in Surguja, defeated a Congress giant by the narrowest of margins, and entered cabinet after more than a decade of political struggle The Free Press Journal — deserves either to be held accountable through a proper legal and institutional process, or to be publicly cleared by an independent inquiry.
What he does not deserve — and what no public official deserves — is to be condemned or exonerated by a social media clip alone.
The Congress has made its allegation. Now let it be tested by the standard that actually matters: evidence, due process, and institutional accountability.
A viral video can start a conversation. Only the truth can end it.
