Ajit Jogi, Konda Vishweshwar Reddy

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[[Category:India |R ]]
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[[Category:Politics |R ]]
  
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=YEAR-WISE DEVELOPMENTS= 
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==As in 2021==
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[https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2021%2F04%2F11&entity=Ar01709&sk=27CB96B1&mode=text  Robin David, April 11, 2021: ''The Times of India'']
  
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Money begets power and power begets more money. Or at least that is what traditional logic says. But one of India’s richest politicians — Konda Vishweshwar Reddy— is now without party. He had joined TRS in 2013 and left it in 2018. He then joined Congress and left it last month. He is now hoping to launch a new political outfit in Telangana.
  
=A brief biography=
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He was the richest MP in the country between 2014 and 2019 with assets worth Rs 528 crore after he won from Chevella in Telangana. He was the second-richest candidate in the 2019 elections with assets of Rs 895 crore. He lost the election that year on a Congress ticket.
[https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2020%2F05%2F30&entity=Ar01115&sk=2458472D&mode=text  Rajeev Deshpande & Subodh Ghildiyal, Ajit Jogi, first C’garh CM and consummate politician, May 30, 2020: ''The Times of India'']
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Most of the 16 years that he lived after a calamitous accident during poll campaigning left him paralysed. Ajit Jogi survived through sheer willpower. A lesser person would have succumbed long ago. As fate would have it, the accident caused serious permanent injury but left his razor sharp mind intact, full of guile, strategem and an unquenched lust for life.
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He has political legacy too. He is the grandson of Konda Venkata Ranga Reddy, former deputy chief minister of united Andhra Pradesh after whom the Ranga Reddy district has been named.
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And today, he is living in a world of contradictions. He is in the process of bringing small regional outfits together on one platform to create one mega regional party in Telangana. But he himself does not want to be involved in state politics. He prefers being Telangana’s representative in the Lok Sabha. He does not mind being called the ‘richest MP’ and ‘richest candidate’, but he cringes when you call him a rich businessman. Husband of Apollo Hospitals MD Sangita Reddy, he says, “I would like to be known as an academic, entrepreneur and researcher instead.
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But being called a rich politician is beneficial in some ways. “Initially, I was concerned (about being called rich),” he says. “They would think, arey, ine paise wala hai. Ine aam admi ki samaysa jaante nai, and all that (He is a rich man. How will he understand the problems of the poor),” he says with a touch of Hyderabadi Dakhni. “But to my shock, it helped me a lot (in 2014). People started saying he is a paisewala (rich). He does not need to take bribes and is a potential winner. And by the way, I am the richest only on paper. Almost every MP in Telangana is richer than me. These people can buy me over 20-30 times. I pay taxes, they don’t.
  
A bureaucrat who found his mooring in politics, Jogi, 74, was an engineer by training. But conventional pursuits would never be his calling. He found the subtleties of politics, its labyrinthine twists and power plays absorbing and felt therein lay fulfilment of personal ambition. He was, to begin with, a useful aide de camp. During the P V Narasimha Rao regime, he skilfully managed the media and kept the ruling camp off balance with regular reports of dozens of Congress MPs signing support for rebel leader Arjun Singh.
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State politics is like “wrestling with the pig in the mud” and he accepts that perhaps he is not cut out for it. “The level of politics is lower in assemblies. At least in Parliament, no one throws chappals at each other.”He admits that one needs to be a bit of a street fighter in state politics. “I am different. I entered politics in 2013 when I was 53. So, I am often thinking of things other than politics.” For instance, Reddy, who has a number of patents and copyrights to his name, adds that even at this moment he is working on a unique rice transplanting machine.
A restless man, Jogi parted ways with Singh, accusing him of backing Digvijay Singh as Madhya Pradesh CM instead of Subash Yadav. He once wheedled a hint out of the taciturn Rao that Congress veterans hit by the “hawala scam” would be denied Lok Sabha tickets by disarmingly describing himself as the then PM’s “man”. “Apne logon ko to bata dijiye,he is understood to have said.
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All this did not prevent him from emerging as a key aide and spokesperson when Sitaram Kesri replaced Rao as party chief, with his ‘backward’ sympathies coming into play. Indeed, Jogi was a persuasive and articulate party spokesperson for more than one Congress chief. He was comfortable in English and Hindi and had a certain charm and suave presence that influenced the listener. He had a wry sense of humour and could throw back his head and have a good laugh.
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Despite his dislike for the rough and tumble for state politics, he has taken the initiative of bringing regional parties including Telangana Jana Samithi, Telangana Inti Party and independents like Teenmar Mallana together. He says a unified regional outfit could take on TRS effectively and does not rule out joining hands with the BJP or Congress in the future. “We will also bring together some people from Congress and TRS. They are looking for a viable alternative.
  
His crowning moment and darkest hour came when he persuaded Sonia Gandhi to despatch him to Chhattisgarh as its first CM. Here he displayed an unsuspected penchant for strong arm tactics and his love for son Amit proved an Achilles heel. Amit got embroiled in criminal cases and Jogi couldn’t bring himself to do any more than reprimand him gently.
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On why he wants to form a new outfit, he says, “In any national party, decisions have to go to the central leadership. Look at the Congress. By the time they understand the problem, report it to the central leadership, find a solution and discuss it democratically, someone like a KCR (chief minister K Chandrasekhar Rao) has changed things.”
 
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The disappearance of the National Commission for Scheduled Castes (NCSC) inquiry report about his alleged caste fudging remains a mystery. He had friends in all parties and though his Adivasi status remained an issue, he never let it catch up with him.
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=Is he a tribal?=
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==2019: Committee says, No; HC upholds his son’s ST status==
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[https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2019%2F08%2F28&entity=Ar01816&sk=71621137&mode=text  August 28, 2019: ''The Times of India'']
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''Panel: Ajit Jogi isn’t Adivasi, doesn’t deserve ST benefits''
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In a major setback to former CM Ajit Jogi, a highpower caste scrutiny committee in Chhattisgarh has rejected his claim of being a tribal — a decision that could lead to cancellation of all his caste certificates and have significant political implications.
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The committee has arrived at the conclusion that Jogi — founder of Janata Congress — doesn’t belong to an Adivasi community and is not entitled to related benefits, said sources. More than a third of Chhattisgarh’s electorate is tribal, and Jogi represents the Marwahi (ST-reserved) constituency. Describing the caste scrutiny panel as ‘Bhupesh high-power committee’, Jogi said: “It’s a wrong decision. I am yet to get a copy of the report. It will be challenged in court.”
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“It is apparent that the committee acted on the guidelines of CM Bhupesh Baghel. The HC has found in a case that my son Amit is a Kanwar tribal of Mudi Gotra. But the high power committee’s finding is that his father is not a tribal,” Jogi said, adding: “I think I’m the only person who doesn’t have a caste. As per high power panel, am not a Kanwar tribal but they have not said what’s my caste.”
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News of the committee’s report was leaked on social media on Monday, and it is yet to be tabled. A government spokesperson refused to confir m or deny the report.
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Ajit Jogi’s son Amit, Janata Congress state chief, said: “I came to know from media that a high power caste scrutiny committee, set up by the Bhupesh Baghel government has passed an order.We’ve moved HC against the committee, raising various points.”
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AJIT JOGI]]
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Latest revision as of 08:24, 14 April 2021

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[edit] YEAR-WISE DEVELOPMENTS

[edit] As in 2021

Robin David, April 11, 2021: The Times of India

Money begets power and power begets more money. Or at least that is what traditional logic says. But one of India’s richest politicians — Konda Vishweshwar Reddy— is now without party. He had joined TRS in 2013 and left it in 2018. He then joined Congress and left it last month. He is now hoping to launch a new political outfit in Telangana.

He was the richest MP in the country between 2014 and 2019 with assets worth Rs 528 crore after he won from Chevella in Telangana. He was the second-richest candidate in the 2019 elections with assets of Rs 895 crore. He lost the election that year on a Congress ticket.

He has political legacy too. He is the grandson of Konda Venkata Ranga Reddy, former deputy chief minister of united Andhra Pradesh after whom the Ranga Reddy district has been named. And today, he is living in a world of contradictions. He is in the process of bringing small regional outfits together on one platform to create one mega regional party in Telangana. But he himself does not want to be involved in state politics. He prefers being Telangana’s representative in the Lok Sabha. He does not mind being called the ‘richest MP’ and ‘richest candidate’, but he cringes when you call him a rich businessman. Husband of Apollo Hospitals MD Sangita Reddy, he says, “I would like to be known as an academic, entrepreneur and researcher instead.” But being called a rich politician is beneficial in some ways. “Initially, I was concerned (about being called rich),” he says. “They would think, arey, ine paise wala hai. Ine aam admi ki samaysa jaante nai, and all that (He is a rich man. How will he understand the problems of the poor),” he says with a touch of Hyderabadi Dakhni. “But to my shock, it helped me a lot (in 2014). People started saying he is a paisewala (rich). He does not need to take bribes and is a potential winner. And by the way, I am the richest only on paper. Almost every MP in Telangana is richer than me. These people can buy me over 20-30 times. I pay taxes, they don’t.”

State politics is like “wrestling with the pig in the mud” and he accepts that perhaps he is not cut out for it. “The level of politics is lower in assemblies. At least in Parliament, no one throws chappals at each other.”He admits that one needs to be a bit of a street fighter in state politics. “I am different. I entered politics in 2013 when I was 53. So, I am often thinking of things other than politics.” For instance, Reddy, who has a number of patents and copyrights to his name, adds that even at this moment he is working on a unique rice transplanting machine.

Despite his dislike for the rough and tumble for state politics, he has taken the initiative of bringing regional parties including Telangana Jana Samithi, Telangana Inti Party and independents like Teenmar Mallana together. He says a unified regional outfit could take on TRS effectively and does not rule out joining hands with the BJP or Congress in the future. “We will also bring together some people from Congress and TRS. They are looking for a viable alternative.”

On why he wants to form a new outfit, he says, “In any national party, decisions have to go to the central leadership. Look at the Congress. By the time they understand the problem, report it to the central leadership, find a solution and discuss it democratically, someone like a KCR (chief minister K Chandrasekhar Rao) has changed things.”

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