Looking at the current migrant labourer crises across India, one can argue that it has emerged due to the failure of the state machinery to provide immediate relief and also because the urban middle class has not shown its philanthropic side. It is a forced reverse-migration of the poor and the vulnerable mass, as the government and civil society failed to assure them comfort and security when the pandemic hit the cities. The terrible growth of economic maladies showcases that even the ‘ablest and visionary’ Prime Minister of the ‘powerful and developed’ nation has failed to estimate and rectify the crises. But why are labourers’ problems so meekly addressed at the crass level of ruling elites’ kindness or public pity? The crises faced by the labourers today also demonstrates the powerlessness of the organized working class movement and failure of Trade union politics to elevate the labour questions at the national level and provide it a vital leadership.