Assembly polls fail to perk up political fortunes of Scindias

Press Trust of India  |  Bhopal 

For the dynasty, which once ruled the erstwhile princely state of Gwalior, the recently-held Assembly elections in and have failed to perk up their political fortunes.

While the Scindia-led government was ousted by the in in the recent elections, her nephew and former Jyotiraditya Scindia, narrowly missed the chance to become the chief of

Yashodhara Raje Scindia, Jyotiraditya's another aunt, who was Sports and in the erstwhile Shivraj Singh Chouhan cabinet, lost her post as the BJP was ousted from power by the in the state. However, she managed to retain her Shivpuri assembly seat.

Yashodhara, a stormy petrel, has a bumpy road ahead as she does not get along well with some senior BJP leaders of and Chambal region, who are calling the shots in the saffron party right now, sources said.

In September this year, Yashodhara had left a BJP state meeting here in a huff, after she found that her mother, late Vijaya Raje Scindia's photograph was not put up at the meeting venue alongside those of the leaders of Jan Sangh and BJP like Syama Prasad Mookerjee, Deen Dayal Upadhyaya, and

became a junior External Affairs Minister in Atal Bihari Vajpayee's cabinet in 1998. She later became minister with independent charge of small scale industries and agro and rural industries.

In December 2003, she became the of Rajasthan, the post which she held till December 2008, after which the came to power.

However, Scindias' sway in did not end with Vasundhara's unseating as Jyotiraditya had become a Union minister by then. He was Union for Communication and from 2007 to 2009 during the UPA I.

During the UPA II, he worked as of State for Commerce and Industries besides of State for Power between 2009 and 2014.

Before the BJP-led NDA trounced Manmohan Singh-led UPA government at the Centre, once again became the of on December 8, 2013 and continued to helm the state till December 11, 2018.

However, this December, Jyotiraditya, the MP from Guna seat in and Congress's in lost out on the chance to be among the youngest chief ministers of the central Indian state, as Kamal Nath, 72, was picked for the top job in the state.

Thirty years ago, Jyotiraditya's father late Madhavrao was denied the post of

In 1989, was all set to be the CM, but strident opposition from senior leader Arjun Singh, who was asked to step down as CM after the Churhat lottery scam, ensured that then could not give the former royal the coveted post.

Singh, in a bid to get his way at the time, had even kept his MLAs ensconced in the Char Imli residence of loyalist Harvansh Singh Thakur.

Madhavrao was so confident of being given the post that he had flown down from and camped in the state for two days. Instead, Motilal Vora was made the chief minister.

Twenty nine years later, history repeated itself as the "so near yet so far" fate befell Madhavrao's son Jyotiraditya.

Congress sources said Jyotiraditya had pointed out to the party leadership that BJP's sloganduring the election campaign "Maaf karo Maharaj, apne toh Shivraj" was centred around him.

TheScindia family of Marathas had ruled the state in pre-independent central-

Jyotiraditya's grandmother Rajmata commanded immense respect in the Sangh Parivar. Following her footsteps, Madhavrao also joined the

In the 1971 elections, the mother-son duo was among the few leaders who defied the wave and emerged victorious from their respective constituencies.

In 1980, Madhavrao joined Indira Gandhi's Congress, a party which had jailed his mother during the Emergency. His sisters, Vasundhara and Yashodhara later followed their mother's footsteps and joined the BJP.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, December 21 2018. 15:56 IST