Political families, India

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=STATE-WISE TRENDS=
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[[File: The Thackeray, Pawar families, As in 2019 Nov.jpg|The Thackeray, Pawar families, As in 2019 Nov <br/> From: [https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/all-you-need-to-know-about-thackeray-and-pawar-families/articleshow/72217603.cms  Nov 25, 2019: ''The Times of India'']|frame|500px]]
 
[[File: The Thackeray, Pawar families, As in 2019 Nov.jpg|The Thackeray, Pawar families, As in 2019 Nov <br/> From: [https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/all-you-need-to-know-about-thackeray-and-pawar-families/articleshow/72217603.cms  Nov 25, 2019: ''The Times of India'']|frame|500px]]
  
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Amit Thackeray feels gone are the days when members of a political clan could "bask in borrowed glory". "Nothing wrong if a politician's son or daughter joins their father. But they will have to prove their credentials by bonding with people and not just by hankering after an MP seat or ministerial post," he said.
 
Amit Thackeray feels gone are the days when members of a political clan could "bask in borrowed glory". "Nothing wrong if a politician's son or daughter joins their father. But they will have to prove their credentials by bonding with people and not just by hankering after an MP seat or ministerial post," he said.
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Revision as of 20:56, 24 March 2024

This is a collection of articles archived for the excellence of their content.


Contents

Dynastic politics: the extent of the phenomenon

As in 2023

Chandrima Banerjee, Sep 13, 2023: The Times of India

Half or more MPs from 9 states have family ties to politics
From: Chandrima Banerjee, Sep 13, 2023: The Times of India
Combined change in asset value of MPs from 2014 to 2019 Lok Sabha elections, in Rs cr.
From: Chandrima Banerjee, Sep 13, 2023: The Times of India
Share of Lok Sabha MPs with family ties. The actual numbers are in brackets
From: Chandrima Banerjee, Sep 13, 2023: The Times of India
No. of Lok Sabha MPs with and without family ties to politics
From: Chandrima Banerjee, Sep 13, 2023: The Times of India
No. of Lok Sabha MPs with family in politics
From: Chandrima Banerjee, Sep 13, 2023: The Times of India

184 current Lok Sabha members have or had family in politicsThat’s about one-third of the Lower House. In proportion to its 301-strong numbers in the House, BJP has 86 such MPs or about 29% of its House strength. It is followed by Congress (25), DMK and Trinamool (9 each), and LJP and JDU (6 each). Just 10 parties — with the smallest numbers — don’t have any MP with family ties. They are either communist or from northeastern states with two exceptions — one Muslim-majority party and a party formed by a BJP rebel. At the other end of the spectrum, there are 12 parties whose entire representation is by MPs who have family ties to politics. Nine of them have just one MP. But the three remaining have more — LJP (6), TDP (3) and SAD (2).

Since dynastic politics is about consolidation of authority, it can be seen as an extension of monarchical rule or caste system — binding power or work to the accident of birth. In seats reserved for SC communities, just about a quarter of representatives have family ties to politics. In general category constituencies, that share is 35%. A greater share in nepotistic networks is obviously not always a sign of power — women are often fielded from seats held by their husbands or in-laws at some point, presumably to ‘hold’ that seat for the party. More than 60% of the women in Lok Sabha have family ties to politics, against the 29% among men.One part of it is the base effect — there are more men, 5.6 times more to be precise, than women and that reduces the share of the nepotistic network. Even when the numbers are really high. But it also means parties are not doing enough to get more women without political backgrounds into the field. The same logic might explain why the share of nepotistic network MPs in ST-reserved constituencies is high — 40%. Another way this shows up is in the difference in academic qualifications. Among MPs in nepotistic political networks, the share with college degrees or more is 73%. For MPs outside these networks, the share is just under 68%. Which is not to imply any correlation between education and politics but to draw attention to the many ways in which even basic things can become ‘privileges’.Because the likelihood of a citizen with limited resources holding an elected office is low, but lower still when the person is from an oppressed community. And political parties are not always willing to do the work to expand the range of backgrounds their candidates come from. This does affect policy. Because ministers are also picked from this restrictive pool. Of the 55 Lok Sabha members who are also ministers, 15 are part of nepotistic networks. And if we consider the 13 MPs who were ministers at some point in this Lok Sabha, the 17th, we add three more to the nepotism list.What does this mean for us? Earlier in 2023, Japan’s decision to skip the G20 meet in India because the foreign minister had to attend budgetary hearings in Parliament was analysed to death. Snub or sincerity, it brought up — rather briefly — the imperative to attend Parliament and do what we elect representatives for. Legislative work.If we remove the Speaker and ministers from our list of MPs, we have 166 with nepotistic networks and 304 without. This is what we found:

Less than 40% attendance: 8 among those with family ties (5%), 10 among those without (3%)

Fewer than 10 debates: 39 in the nepo network (23%), 59 in non-nepo (19%)

Zero questions: 7 nepo (4%), 10 non-nepo (3%)

So, nepotistic network MPs are only slightly behind their non-network colleagues. The same goes for continuous engagement — 115 MPs with family ties to politics (69%) and 215 MPs without (70%) asked 100 or more questions in Parliament.Even private member bills — those introduced by MPs who are not ministers — fall into this pattern. Nearly 250 introduced by nepo network MPs and 467 by non-network ones, bringing the average for both to 1.5 bills. But averages obfuscate one thing — that only a handful of MPs carry Parliament. Half the private member bills by representatives with family ties came from just 11 MPs. Among bills from those without family ties, just 18 MPs accounted for half. That leaves a staggering 119 MPs within nepotistic networks (71%) and 215 MPs without (70%) who did not introduce any private member bill at all.So, the argument is not that nepotistic network MPs are just as good as non-network ones, but that they are equally underperforming.Where the spectacular difference does lie is wealth. The Association for Democratic Reforms puts together reports based on candidate affidavits. We used its data on assets of re-contesting MPs and matched it against our nepotistic network dataset. Seats where MPs have changed or are vacant were removed. And it turns out that MPs with family ties to politics have, on an average, assets worth Rs 24 lakh more than other MPs. After a point, some of these numbers almost stop making sense. Re-contesting Karnataka MPs with family ties to politics reported a combined asset value increase of Rs 290 crore between 2014 and 2019. UP’s re-contesting Lok Sabha legislators put together an additional Rs 188 crore combined in those five years. In fact, even though the share of nepotistic network MPs among recontesting ones was just under 37%, their combined wealth exceeds that of all other re-contesting MPs by about Rs 1,164 crore. That’s more than the combined industrial development scheme allocation for Himachal Pradesh and Uttarakhand.

Chief Ministerships staying within the family

Till 2021 July

Chief Ministers who were parent- child or spouses, Till 2021 July
From: Anil Gejji, July 28, 2021: The Times of India


See graphic:

Chief Ministers who were parent- child or spouses, Till 2021 July

Political dynasties: the pluses, minuses

The main political dynasties of India

1940s-2019: The main political dynasties of India
Dynastic Congress and BJP MPs, 1999-2019
From: May 24, 2019: The Times of India


See graphic, '1940s-2019: The main political dynasties of India
Dynastic Congress and BJP MPs, 1999-2019 '


2016: an NYU study

Dynastic Members of Parliament, percentage and party-wise; Graphic courtesy: The Times of India, Aug 07 2016


The Times of India, Aug 07 2016  New studies on India's political dynasties busts many assumptions

The Nehru-Gandhis, the Badals, the Abdullahs, the Yadavs, the Scindias -what is it about India's political soil that lets so many family trees thrive?

It's because of a lingering feudalism, say some. It is because of our easy acceptance of hereditary occupations, say others.

But though dynasties in India have been described in history and biography , the phenomenon has never been empirically analysed. A new set of data-driven and theoretically ambitious studies, led by New York University political scientist Kanchan Chandra, is the first to actually study how dynasty and democracy interact. Their book, `Democratic Dynasties: State, Party and Family in Contemporary Indian Politics', has put the skids under much of our popular wisdom.

Dynasty is a paradox, it both hurts and furthers democracy

Dynasties, as we instinctively know, are a violation of political equality because they create entry barriers to outsiders.The data shows that across parties, dynasty logic entrenches forward caste privilege. And yet, they also have collateral benefits that deepen democracy , by opening avenues for women, young people, Muslims and other social groups who don't have an easy way up our given political structures. It is not an ideal route, but dynasties seem to have worked like quotas for the representation of these groups, suggests Chandra.

Party and state set-ups, not feudal charisma encourages dynasties

Indian dynasties are a product of its democracy; former royals and feudal notables account for barely 3% across the last three Lok Sabhas. The Scindias are, in fact, an exception in how they adapted to electoral politics.Voters do not particularly favour dynasts, and they themselves frame their electoral appeals in modern terms, to convey credibility and service rather than entitlement. Also, contrary to popular fears, families do not maintain a tight grip over a constituency; only 5% of parliamentary constituen cies have been continuously represented by a dynastic MP between 2004 and 2014.Dynastic and non-dynastic MPs often switch places in the same constituencies.

So what drives the forming and strengthening of dynasties? Two things, says Chandra -the fact that political office is more attractive than ever before, and the organisational weakness of parties (the lack of clear rules in ticket al location and the assurance of loy alty in sticking with a family member). This is why, even leaders stub bornly resis tant to dynasty like Mamata Banerjee, for instance -can end up allowing it.

Dynasties are pervasive around the world; India isn't unique or extreme

With dynasts occupying 20% of the 2004 Lok Sabha, 30% of the 2009 Lok Sabha and 22% of the 2014 one, India is definitely among the more dynasty-loving nations, but it is in the same league as Japan, Iceland or Ireland, where between a third and a fourth of the legislators had helpful family connections. It is much less dynastic than the Philippines, for instance, where dynasties account for a full 50%. Countries on the lower end are Belgium, Israel, and the US, with 6 to 11%, and Canada where only 3% of the legislators were dynasts. Of course, some nations have institutionalised space for ruling families and aristocrats, like the UK, Sweden, Thailand, Zambia and so on.

Discords/ tiffs within political families

... in 10 political families/ 1911-2015

India Today April 27, 2015

Damayanti Datta

10 political family tiffs that have often turned ugly

A look at slugfests in political families that often turned disturbing

As the Gandhi vs Gandhi clamour hots up in Congress, a look at slugfests in political families that often turned disturbing.

INC President Sonia Gandhi vs son Rahul GandhI

Sonia Gandhi vs Rahul Gandhi
This is about Mr Rahul Gandhi's sudden, unexplained 'leave' of absence in 2015.;
From: Damayanti Datta, April 27, 2015: India Today

See graphic:

Sonia Gandhi vs Rahul Gandhi
This is about Mr Rahul Gandhi's sudden, unexplained 'leave' of absence in 2015.

Mahatma Gandhi vs eldest son Harilal Mohandas Gandhi

Mahatma Gandhi vs Harilal Gandhi;
From: Damayanti Datta, April 27, 2015: India Today

See graphic:

Mahatma Gandhi vs Harilal Gandhi

Indira Gandhi's husband Feroze Gandhi vs Jawaharlal Nehru

Firoz Gandhi vs Pt. Jawaharlal Nehru;
From: Damayanti Datta, April 27, 2015:India Today

See graphic:

Firoz Gandhi vs Pt. Jawaharlal Nehru

Indira Gandhi vs Maneka Gandhi

Indira Gandhi vs Maneka Gandhi;
From: Damayanti Datta, April 27, 2015:India Today

See graphic:

Indira Gandhi vs Maneka Gandhi

Samajwadi Party chief Mulayam Singh Yadav vs son and Uttar Pradesh CM Akhilesh Yadav

Mulayam Singh Yadav vs Akhilesh Yadav;
From: Damayanti Datta, April 27, 2015:India Today

See graphic

Mulayam Singh Yadav vs Akhilesh Yadav

See also Samajwadi Party

Former PM H.D. Deve Gowda vs younger son H.D. Kumaraswamy

Former Prime Minister of India- Haradanahalli Doddegowda Deve Gowda (H. D. Deve Gowda);
From: Damayanti Datta, April 27, 2015:India Today

See graphic:

Former Prime Minister of India- Haradanahalli Doddegowda Deve Gowda (H. D. Deve Gowda)

Madhavrao Scindia vs mother Vijayaraje Scindia

See graphic:

Scindia family

Shiv Sena founder Balasaheb Thackeray vs nephew Raj Thackeray

See graphic

Thackeray family

DMK chief M. Karunanidhi vs elder son M.K. Alagiri


See graphic

DMK family

Leader of the People's Party of Punjab, Manpreet Singh Badal vs uncle Parkash Singh Badal

See graphic:

Badal family


STATE-WISE TRENDS

Maharashtra:

The Thackeray, Pawar families

The Thackeray, Pawar families, As in 2019 Nov
From: Nov 25, 2019: The Times of India

See graphic:

The Thackeray, Pawar families, As in 2019 Nov

B

Vaibhav Purandare, Nov 29, 2019: The Times of India

Key Highlights

Bal Thackeray always referred to Pawar as "Sharad babu" in person, their families dined together and looked after each other

Pawar played a key role in getting Sena to back Congress' Pratibha Patil and Pranab Mukherjee for President

At the time of the Sena patriarch's final illness in 2012, it was Pawar who often gave Uddhav strength

One evening in October 1966, a round-faced, portly man dressed in white plonked himself on one of the benches that draw a neat ring around Shiva ji Park in central Mumbai. He was not out for fresh air, but for a ringside view of a rally organised by Shiv Sena, a new sons-of-the-soil outfit launched by a former cartoonist, Bal Thackeray. As Thackeray launched into a tirade against migrants flocking to Mumbai in his first speech, the man on the bench, Sharad Pawar, a Congress activist from Baramati, listened intently.

Not that Pawar, who started out as a Youth Congress worker and looked up to YB Chavan as his icon, agreed with what Thackeray said. He stuck to his party's stand of "unity in diversity," but knew the ex-cartoonist was not a man to be ignored. Pawar had, in fact, first met Bal Thackeray before the Sena was formed; Thackeray's father, Prabodhankar, was a public figure who routinely attracted visitors at his Dadar residence, and Bal had developed a reputation of his own with his brushstrokes. So an acquaintance was in place.

After the inaugural Sena rally, the two travelled in different directions politically as the Sena-Congress bonhomie of the late 1960s and early 1970s - forged in their shared opposition to Communists in the city's mill heartland - ended. But a personal rapport endured, developing into a familial bond that has now enabled the late Sena founder's son Uddhav to take over the reins of the state with Pawar as mover of a three-party coalition.

Bal Thackeray always referred to Pawar as "Sharad babu" in person, though in a clear separation between the personal and the political, he dubbed him a "maidyacha pota" (a sack of flour) in speeches. Their families dined together and looked after each other. When Pawar's daughter Supriya was barely a year old, the then Congress leader and his wife Pratibha once had dinner at the Thackerays' new home, after which Pawar said he'd drive back to his hometown in Pune district. Thackeray tried to dissuade him: it was late and Supriya was small, so he urged his "dear friend" to stay back and leave in the morning. Pawar however insisted on going, and by Thackeray's own admission, he was anxious and stayed awake until he'd confirmed over phone that the Pawars had reached safely.

When Pawar, as NCP chief, decided to nominate Supriya to the Rajya Sabha in 2006, the Sena chief rang him up and told him he was annoyed because he'd heard the news from someone else. Pawar tried to explain that there was no way he could get Sena-BJP votes for her as they had their own candidates, but Thackeray persuaded BJP not to put up a saffron alliance candidate against her. "I've known Supriya as a child, and she's played with my children since she was six months old. How could I not see to it that she enters the RS unopposed?" Thackeray asked.

Pawar played a key role in getting Sena to back Congress' Pratibha Patil and Pranab Mukherjee for President, and at the time of the Sena patriarch's final illness in 2012, it was Pawar who often gave Uddhav strength.

This time, the barrier between personal and political has been breached, and Supriya Sule's tweet on Thursday showed the extent of the warmth. "Maa Saheb and Balasaheb -missing you so much today. Both of you should have been here today. They treated me with so much love and affection more than a daughter! Their role in my life will always be special and memorable!" Supriya wrote.

Maharashtra: transition and impatient scions/ 1960s-2019

Ambarish Mishra, Maharashtra political dynasties stumped as scions refuse to wait for big prize, March 14, 2019: The Times of India


GenNext's clamour for power and unwillingness to wait for it have resulted in some of Maharashtra's key political families resembling precarious houses of cards as the decks are cleared for the Lok Sabha elections.

The done thing in dynastic politics has always been for youngsters to spend some time learning the ropes in the background or on the sidelines, often in the shadow of the patriarchs. Even if ideologically, compartments ceased to be watertight decades ago, with the Pawar family of Baramati and the Vikhe Patils of Ahmednagar too going off in more than one direction, the core value of gradually climbing up the ladder was not under threat. Now suddenly it is, as a result of overarching ambition and a now-or-never attitude.

And the Pawar and Vikhe Patil dynasties are among the first to have been at the receiving end this poll season. Sharad Pawar initially made it clear he and daughter Supriya Sule would be the only two members of the family contesting the LS polls. But his nephew Ajit's son Parth pressed on, claiming the Maval seat + for himself, until Pawar Sr deftly resolved the issue and gave Parth the go-ahead while withdrawing from the fray himself. And when leader of opposition Radhakrishna Vikhe Patil of Congress failed in his attempts to wrest the Ahmednagar LS seat from NCP in his son Sujay's favour, Sujay quickly joined the BJP + .

Supriya Sule denied on Wednesday that the Parth episode had created a rift in the Pawar family. "For me and Ajitdada, family ties are of greater importance than anything else. Blood is thicker than the elixir of politics," she said.

However, some seniors are confused and distraught. "Everything is moving at a frenetic pace. A young politician wants to make it big in too short a span of time by using the family name," a senior NCP functionary said. "A young scion had to spend a couple of years by the side of the patriarch before graduating to bigger opportunities. A panchayat samiti or zilla parishad membership was the first step of the ladder," the functionary said.

The transition of power and political legacy was smooth in many political families in the 1960s, such as the Hireys of Nashik, the Vartaks of Virar, the Vikhe Patils, the Pawars, and the Chavans of Nanded. The Thackeray clan of Mumbai was the first to face open revolt by one of its young members, Raj Thackeray.

Interestingly, the number of Maharashtra leaders who showed no great interest in pushing their kith and kin into politics was impressive. Among them were Congressmen like Yashwantrao Chavan, Vasantdada Patil (his son briefly dabbled in politics before fading into oblivion) and Vasantrao Naik, and opposition stalwarts such as S M Joshi, N G Goray, George Fernandes and Mrinal Gore.

Those who were keen on handing over political legacy to their children took care to groom them. NCP veterans spoke about how Pawar Sr put his daughter through the paces when she decided to join the family vocation. Sule, now an NCP leader, said, "My father made me go from one Mantralaya department to the other with files to study the mechanism of the state administration when I took up the issue of women's empowerment. Being a member of a political family means more hard work."

Gopinath Munde would make daughter Pankaja sit next to him during media interviews or while studying papers of a complicated development issue, it is said.

The political climate began to undergo a change after Raj Thackeray's revolt against Matoshree, making Maharashtra's netas aware of GenNext's stirrings.

Even today, however, many upcoming scions are eager to hone their political skills, among them Yuva Sena chief Aditya Thackeray, Amit Thackeray, son of MNS chief Raj Thackeray and Narayan Rane's son Nitesh.

Then there are those like Milind Deora, Praniti Shinde and Amit Deshmukh of the Congress and Poonam Mahajan of the BJP who have succeeded in good measure in stepping out of their father's shadow. "But some refuse to be low-profile. An expensive lifestyle and vanity may lead to a disconnect between young politicians and grassroot workers of a party," said a political commentator.

While Sule's view is that the young generation should be encouraged to join politics, she thinks they should put their shoulder to the wheel. "They can't keep flaunting their family card," she said.

Amit Thackeray feels gone are the days when members of a political clan could "bask in borrowed glory". "Nothing wrong if a politician's son or daughter joins their father. But they will have to prove their credentials by bonding with people and not just by hankering after an MP seat or ministerial post," he said.

Disagreements within families

1984-2016

NETA FAMILY FEUDS, Oct 25 2016 : The Times of India


Yadavs are the latest in the list of political families facing a split as generations clash over way ahead for the party & roles they play

AIADMK

I n 1984, when MG Ramachandran was incapacitated after a stroke, Jayalalithaa reportedly tried to take over the position of CM. After MGR's death in Dec 1987, AIADMK split into two factions between Janaki (MGR's wife) and Jayalalithaa.Following AIADMK's rout in the 1989 state polls, the faction led by Janaki merged under that led by Jayalalithaa

TDP

In 1995, Chandrababu Naidu staged a coup against party founder NT Rama Rao, replacing him as Andhra's CM. Naidu would later say a “dushta shakti“ (referring to NTR's second wife Lakshmi Parvati) tried to destroy the party and to protect it from the “evil force“ he had to revolt and split TDP. Members of the NTR family supported Naidu. After NTR died of a heart attack in Jan 1996, Parvati floated a rival faction TDP NTR. Both Naidu and she staked claim to NTR's legacy

DMK

Hints from party supremo Karunanidhi that his younger son MK Stalin was to be his political heir sparked tension in the DMK first family as MK Alagiri, Stalin's elder brother, openly vented his ire and accused his father of being “partial“ to his younger brother.

Alagiri was eventually expelled from DMK in 2014 for engaging in “anti party“ activities

Shiv Sena

Raj Thackeray resigned from his uncle Bal Thackeray's party in 2006 and went on to form the Maharashtra Navnirman Sena. He had complained about being sidelined in the party and said “all I had asked for was respect (from `Matoshree', the Bandra residence of Thackeray and his son, Uddhav).All I got was insult and humiliation“

As in 2022

Himanshi Dhawan, February 13, 2022: The Times of India

The poll bugle has sounded, and the spotlight is on political families divided by party lines. Bahus have jumped ship, brothers have become rivals and even bachchas have chosen a different political path, leading to a volatile mix of cold wars and heated words. Sometimes it gets quite ugly. Take Uttar Pradesh’s Bidhuna constituency where daughter Riya Shakya accused her relatives of abducting her unwell father and sitting BJP MLA Vinay Shakya in a video released on social media. Father Vinay has switched sides to Samajwadi Party and issued a video to refute these claims. Father and daughter will now contest against each other as 25-year-old Riya has been given a ticket by BJP. In Punjab’s Qadian constituency, the white multi-storeyed Bajwa kothi (bungalow) where Rajya Sabha MP and Congress leader Partap Singh Bajwa lives with his extended family, including younger brother Fatehjang Singh, always had a Congress flag at high mast. A month ago the same house had two flags fluttering—Congress and BJP. The rivalry between the two brothers that was behind doors is now in the open when Fatehjung, currently MLA from Qadian, quit Congress to join BJP. Partap Singh is fighting on a Congress ticket from Qadian while Fatehjung has got a BJP ticket from neighbouring Batala. “I will canvas in Qadian if my party asks me to,” Fatehjung says, throwing the gauntlet, “As a younger brother of a leader I have always felt overshadowed. I have the chance now to show who the real leader of the masses is. ”

The Bajwas have joined the party late (pun intended). Adarsh Shastri, the grandson of former PM and freedom fighter Lal Bahadur Shastri, was working in Apple when he quit his job and joined Aam Aadmi Party in 2013. To say family members, who have been long-time Congress loyalists, were upset would be an understatement. Adarsh was asked to move out of the joint family home by his father. “He said that we can’t have Congress and AAP leaders and workers waiting in the same room. I understood and moved out,” he says. Adarsh continued to be the butt of jokes and banter at every family gathering with both his father and uncle (BJP’s Siddharth Nath Singh) checking on him ever so often to see if he wanted to switch sides. “It was all good natured but there were many jokes at my expense,” he says. So when Adarsh quit AAP to join Congress it was a “double homecoming. ” “My family and I shifted back to our old home and we all live together,” he says.

Amongst the earliest families to have different political affiliations under the same roof were former Congress leader and UP CM Sucheta Kripalani and husband J B Kripalani. The latter had established the Kisan Mazdoor Praja Party (KMPP) in 1950 following differences with PM Jawaharlal Nehru.

An even more high-profile split came when Sanjay Gandhi’s widow Maneka Gandhi left Congress after a fallout with her mother-in-law Indira Gandhi. She joined BJP and to this day any interaction between her son Varun Gandhi and Congress leader Rahul Gandhi draws attention. The two were sworn in to the Lok Sabha in June 2009 and proceeded to greet their aunts across the aisle which made headlines.

Political commentator and author Rasheed Kidwai says that family members sporting different political affiliations have less to do with ideology. “The only permanent interest is family. Very often the split is planned so that different family members stay in different parties and the family’s business remains secure,” he says.

But some relationships have been less than cordial. Differences between Madhavrao Scindia and his mother Rajmata Vijay Raje Scindia are said to have begun around 1972 over the money being spent on Jan Sangh activities and close aide Sardar Angre’s influence on the Rajmata. Rajmata was among the founding members of the Jan Sangh, the precursor to the BJP. Kidwai in his book ‘The House of Scindias: A Saga of Power, Politics and Intrigue’ writes, “Close friends of Madhavrao have claimed that the young maharaja was shocked to see money and jewellery disappearing from Jai Vilas Palace. ” This eventually led Madhavrao to split from his mother and join the Congress. Kidwai also records an old interview where Madhavrao described his mother as a “highly strung” person. “Once she said that I should have been trampled under the foot of an elephant. ” The Rajmata blamed Madhavrao’s wife for the family rift, according to Kidwai. “His wife could not bear his proximity to me. So she caused the rift,” she reportedly said. The rivalry has carried on to the next generation, says Kidwai. “From 2001 to 2020, aunt Yashodhara and Jyotiraditya remained locked in a fight for their control over the political turf, each claiming to be the true inheritor of the Scindia legacy. In 2017, Yashodhara’s son’s wedding reception was planned at Gwalior’s Jai Vilas Palace. But the venue had to be abruptly changed to Usha Kiran Palace Hotel as somebody had mischievously watered the lawns of Rani Mahal, making it unfit to hold a reception. Sources close to Yashodhara pointed a finger at Jyotiraditya, who, as head of the Scindia family, has employees reporting directly to him. ” Jyotiraditya’s “ghar wapsi” to the BJP from the Congress has done little to bury the hatchet.

Not all relationships are acrimonious. Former Bolangir MP and part of the Odisha royal family Kalikesh Singh Deo is with the BJD while his uncle has been with BJP for many decades now. Kalikesh has, in fact, fought several elections against his sister-in-law Sangeeta. “We are not very close, but we do have to meet at the harvest festival of Nuakhai Johar for some rituals. The otherwise solemn ceremony turns into a media circus with rumours of me quitting the party to join BJP. Fortunately, it has become a joke in my party and no one takes this seriously,” Kalikesh says.

Former Rajya Sabha MP and Congress leader Rajeev Shukla, who is married to BJP minister Ravi Shankar Prasad’s sister, says that they have succeeded in keeping the political and personal apart. But the legendary trope of jija-saala (brothers-in-law) in Indian families has been the subject of much entertainment in Parliament and for TV debates. “If he made a remark against the treasury benches, I would rise in protest and parliamentarians would have a good laugh at our expense. Even the TV channels would provoke us into fights,” Shukla says, adding that finally Prasad put his foot down and refused to participate in TV discussions that included Shukla. The leg pulling extends to family gatherings too.

But what about after the polls are over? Punjab’s Fatehjung has not met his brother since he broke rank. “Maybe after the election, we will discuss our win or loss over a cup of tea,” he says.

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