The United Democratic Front (UDF) has announced a series of conclaves in Kerala focusing on two important sectors—higher education and healthcare. These events are being planned to bring together experts, educators, students, healthcare workers, and the general public for open discussions on issues affecting these fields. The conclaves will also gather feedback from different stakeholders and aim to prepare policy suggestions that address real ground-level problems.
I am writing about this because education and health are not just policy topics—they affect every single family in some way or the other. In Kerala, where people are deeply invested in both fields, a political front taking up the initiative to organise public conclaves is worth noting. These events are not just about speeches but are being positioned as platforms to listen, share, and plan. If you are a student, parent, teacher, doctor, nurse, or even just a citizen who is concerned about the future of public services, these conclaves will likely raise points that matter to you.
What the UDF Plans with These Conclaves
The UDF has planned separate state-level conclaves—one on higher education and another on healthcare. These will not be typical political events. Instead, the goal is to focus on public interest and gather suggestions for future governance.
The higher education conclave is expected to discuss:
- Issues with university autonomy
- Reforms in curriculum and exam systems
- Student mental health and counselling
- The future of online education
- Employability after graduation
- Funding gaps in public universities
Meanwhile, the healthcare conclave will likely address:
- Overload on government hospitals
- Gaps in rural health infrastructure
- Concerns of doctors and nurses in public sector
- Health insurance scheme failures or limitations
- Delay in health projects due to red-tape
UDF’s Reason Behind the Move
This effort is being seen as a direct response to what the UDF calls a lack of transparency and poor governance by the ruling LDF, especially in sectors that directly affect the public. In recent years, there have been complaints from students about university delays and lack of job opportunities. Similarly, several patients and healthcare workers have raised concerns about understaffed hospitals and long waiting times in government facilities.
By conducting these conclaves, the UDF is aiming to understand what people on the ground are experiencing. Instead of only relying on expert panels, they have announced that they will listen to all stakeholders—parents, students, teachers, frontline health workers and the public.
Public Involvement and Feedback
The interesting part of these conclaves is that they are not limited to party workers or academics. The UDF has opened up participation to the general public as well. They have also announced that suggestions gathered during these events will be compiled into a public report and could shape the UDF’s future policies if elected to power.
For instance, if a teacher from a government college points out how a new rule is hurting student attendance, or if a nurse from a primary health centre highlights a basic infrastructure gap, those points will be documented and taken seriously. This method could make the UDF’s policy proposals more grounded and practical.
Why These Conclaves Could Matter
These conclaves come at a time when both education and health in Kerala are facing unique challenges:
- University results are often delayed, causing stress among students and parents.
- Many public colleges are short-staffed, and contract teachers struggle with poor pay and lack of job security.
- The COVID pandemic exposed both the strengths and weaknesses of Kerala’s health system.
- Rising costs of private healthcare have made people more dependent on government hospitals.
- There is growing dissatisfaction among junior doctors and nurses over lack of career growth and long duty hours.
In this context, any platform that promotes serious discussion and feedback, especially before elections, deserves attention.