menu_open
Columnists Actual . Favourites . Archive
We use cookies to provide some features and experiences in QOSHE

More information  .  Close
Aa Aa Aa
- A +

Dynastic battles of November polls

14 1
previous day

The Pawars, Thackerays and Sorens, whose parties have undergone the process of fission, will have to demonstrate they still enjoy the loyalty of ethnic groups on whose support their power grew

Pawars, Thackerays and Sorens

The Assembly elections in Maharashtra and Jharkhand in November will determine the fate of the Pawars, the Thackerays and the Sorens, three of India’s premier “democratic dynasties,” a term Kanchan Chandra used as the title of the seminal work she edited. Each of the three has undergone the process of fission. Two of them have experienced splits in the parties they have been synonymous with. All three will have to demonstrate they still enjoy the loyalty of ethnic groups on whose support their power and prestige grew.

ADVERTISEMENT

Fission poses an existential challenge to the Pawars, for both their dynasty and the Nationalist Congress Party, the party they led, have split. Founded by Sharad Pawar, the fissure within the dynasty emerged over the issue of succession. As his daughter Supriya Sule’s public profile grew, so did, understandably, his nephew Ajit’s anxieties, for patriarchs or matriarchs of democratic dynasties prefer to pass the baton to their children than to their husbands and wives or to nephews and nieces.

Ajit first broke away from the dynasty in 2019, for all of 80 hours—and then permanently in July 2023, after leading an NCP........

© Midday


Get it on Google Play