Jump to content

Nationalist Congress Party

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Nationalist Youth Congress)

Nationalist Congress Party
AbbreviationNCP
PresidentAjit Pawar
SpokespersonSana Malik Shaikh
Lok Sabha LeaderSunil Tatkare
Rajya Sabha LeaderPraful Patel
Sunetra Pawar
FounderSharad Pawar
P. A. Sangma
Tariq Anwar
Founded10 June 1999 (25 years ago) (1999-06-10)
Split fromIndian National Congress
Headquarters10, Bishmabhar Marg, New Delhi, India-110001
Student wingNCP Student's Wing
Youth wingNCP Youth's Wing
Women's wingNCP Women Wing
IdeologyLiberal conservatism
Secularism[1]
Indian nationalism
Economic Liberalism
Political positionCentre-right
Colours  Pink (post–2023)[2]
  Pacific Blue (pre–2023)
ECI StatusState Party[3]
Alliance
Seats in Lok Sabha
1 / 543
Seats in Rajya Sabha
3 / 245
Seats in State Legislative Assemblies
Indian states
41 / 288
(Maharashtra)
7 / 60
(Nagaland)
3 / 60
(Arunachal Pradesh)
Seats in Maharashtra Legislative Council
8 / 78
Number of states and union territories in government
3 / 31
Election symbol
Party flag
Website
ncponline.in

The Nationalist Congress Party is one of the state parties in India[4][5] and is one of the major political parties in Maharashtra with a recognised state party status in Nagaland and Kerala.[1][6] The party has its presence in legislative assemblies of Maharashtra, Nagaland, and Arunachal Pradesh, with being in the governing coalition in all of these states. Besides this, the party is also part of the current governing coalition National Democratic Alliance led by the Bharatiya Janata Party.

The original incarnation of the party was founded in 1999 by Sharad Pawar, P.A. Sangma, and Tariq Anwar after a split within the Congress. After major disagreements between top party leaders in 2023, a split between the party occurred. This resulted in two major faction emerging, one led by the founder president Sharad Pawar and the other led by Ajit Pawar.[7][6] After a legal battle, the Supreme Court of India gave judgement in favour of the faction led by Ajit Pawar, and was allocated the party symbol and name. Subsequently, the Sharad Pawar led faction formed the NCP (SP). Under the leadership of Ajit Pawar, the NCP revamped itself and adopted the color pink to associate with the party.[8][9]

The Nagaland state unit which was supporting the NDPP-BJP state government and the Jharkhand state unit of the party went with the Ajit Pawar-led NCP while the Kerala state unit of the party which was a part of the Left Democratic Front went with the Sharad Pawar-led NCP(SP).

Party history and performance

[edit]

First incarnation led by Sharad Pawar

[edit]

Split from Congress

[edit]

The NCP was formed on 10 June 1999, by Sharad Pawar, P. A. Sangma, and Tariq Anwar after they were expelled from the Indian National Congress on 20 May 1999, for disputing the right of Italian-born Sonia Gandhi to lead the party.[10][11][12] When the NCP formed, the Indian Congress (Socialist) – Sarat Chandra Sinha party merged into the new party.[13]

In government

[edit]

Despite the NCP being founded on opposition to the leadership of Sonia Gandhi, the party joined the Congress-led United Progressive Alliance (UPA) to form the government of Maharashtra in October 1999. In 2004, the party joined the UPA to form the national government led by Manmohan Singh. The NCP's leader, Sharad Pawar served as the Minister of Agriculture for both five-year terms of the Singh-led government. The party remained part of the Congress-led Maharashtra state government until 2014.[14] On 20 June 2012, P. A. Sangma left the NCP to contest the presidential election, which he lost.[15]

In opposition

[edit]

In the April and May 2014 Lok Sabha elections, the UPA lost to the rival National Democratic Alliance (NDA) led by Narendra Modi and the NCP was out of government for the first time in ten years. The NCP broke its alliance with the Congress Party just before the October 2014 Maharashtra Legislative Assembly elections to contest them on its own.[16] In the assembly election the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) emerged as the largest party and formed a minority government, initially with support from the NCP.

In April 2019, voting took place for the 48 Lok Sabha seats from Maharashtra. The Congress and NCP had a seat-sharing arrangement.[17] Similarly, despite their differences, the BJP and Shiv Sena once again contested the elections together under the NDA banner.[18][19] The election was another landslide victory for the NDA, with the BJP and Shiv Sena winning 23 and 18 seats, respectively, out of the total of the state's 48 Lok Sabha seats. The Congress Party won only one seat in the state whereas the NCP won five seats from its stronghold of western Maharashtra.[20]

Formation of Maharashtra Vikash Aghadi and subsequent split

[edit]

During the October 2019 Maharashtra Legislative Assembly elections, the BJP–Shiv-Sena and NCP–Congress alliances remained intact for seat sharing. The BJP and Shiv Sena together gained the majority of seats in the assembly but could not form a government due to disagreements between the two parties. The BJP, with 105 seats, was far short of the 145 seats required to form a majority and declined to form a minority government. As a result, Shiv Sena started talks with the NCP and Congress to form a government. However, in a controversial move, on 23 November 2019, the BJP formed a government with support from the NCP, with Ajit Pawar as Deputy Chief Minister. This government collapsed three days later with Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis and Pawar resigning their respective positions. Finally, the NCP came back into power at the state level as part of the Maha Vikas Aghadi coalition formed with Shiv Sena and the Congress. On 28 November 2019, the Governor of Maharashtra swore in Shiv Sena chief Uddhav Thackeray as the new Chief Minister of Maharashtra. Thackeray's cabinet included ministers from the NCP in key portfolios.[21][22]

However, this alliance lost power in June 2022 after a rebel faction led by Shiv Sena leader Eknath Shinde gathered the support of a majority of Sena MLAs and reestablished the previous Sena-BJP coalition.[23] Subsequently, on 20 July, NCP President Sharad Pawar dissolved almost all units of the party.[24]

Second incarnation led by Ajit Pawar

[edit]

In July 2023, Ajit Pawar, along with many of his supporters, left the Sharad Pawar-led NCP and joined the ruling Shiv Sena-BJP government as a Deputy Chief Minister of Maharashtra.[25] This caused the NCP to split into two factions, with Ajit Pawar claiming in a letter to the Election Commission that he had been elected party president on June 30.[26] In his first meeting after the split, he expressed a desire to retain the party's symbol and name, urged Sharad Pawar to retire and give opportunities to new people, and criticised many of Sharad's decisions, including the formation of a government with the Shiv Sena instead of the BJP in 2019.[27] On 7 February 2024, The Election Commission Of India (ECI) awarded the party name and symbol to the faction headed by Ajit Pawar. The faction led by Sharad Pawar will be henceforth known as Nationalist Congress Party (SharadChandra Pawar)[28]

Party symbol, flag and color

[edit]

The election symbol of NCP is an analogue alarm clock.[29][30] The clock is drawn in blue and has two legs and an alarm button. It is situated on a tri-coloured Indian flag.[31]

Controversies and criticism

[edit]

The Nationalist Congress Party has been extensively criticized for several reasons such as political corruption, insensitive comments, links to the underworld, and moral policing.

NCP leader Sharad Pawar was accused of having links to the underworld. This was revealed by former Supreme Court lawyer Ram Jethmalani, who had confirmed that after the March 1993 bombings in Bombay, Dawood Ibrahim had called him from London, saying that he was prepared to come to India and stand trial, on the condition that he should not be subjected to any third degree treatment from the police.[32] When Jethmalani had conveyed this to Sharad Pawar, the political leaders in power did not agree to this proposal. As per Jethmalani, their refusal to allow Dawood's return was due to their fears that he would expose their secrets.[33][34]

In May 2005, Nationalist Congress Party (NCP) workers stormed a pub in Pune, Maharashtra, broke window panes, damaged furniture, and thrashed visitors. The move came days after Pune Police had forced five pubs to shut before the closing time of 12:30 am.[35]

On 29 November 2008, in the aftermath of the terrorist attack in Mumbai, NCP leader and Deputy Chief Minister R.R. Patil was forced to resign after making insensitive comments after the attack. He was quoted as saying, "They (the terrorists) came to kill 5,000 people but we ensured minimal damage".[36] When asked at a press conference whether the terror strike was an intelligence failure Patil said, "It is not like that. In big cities like this, incidents like this do happen. It's is not a total failure."[37]

On 7 April 2013, NCP leader Ajit Pawar's statement at a speech in Indapur sparked controversy due to its alleged callousness. In response to a 55-day fast by activists protesting the Maharashtra governments inability to provide water during a drought, he asked whether he should "urinate into [the dam]" to make up for the lack of water in it. After a public outcry against his statement, he publicly apologized, saying that the comment was the "biggest mistake of [his] life".[38]

In 2021, Senior Inspector Sachin Vaze, an encounter specialist, was arrested for his involvement in the Antilia bomb scare. Through an investigation, Vaze revealed that he was acting at the behest of Anil Deshmukh, who was then minister of Home Affairs.[39] Vaze and Deshmukh were also involved in collecting extortion money in December 2020 from members of the Indian Hotel and Restaurant Association (AHAR).[40] Deshmukh was also under investigation by the Central Bureau of Investigation and Enforcement Directorate for money laundering, following accusations made by the former Mumbai Police commissioner Param Bir Singh.[41]

On 23 February 2022, NCP President and leader Nawab Malik was arrested by the Enforcement Directorate in a money laundering case and his alleged links with underworld don Dawood Ibrahim.[42][43] He was charged and placed under arrest under the provisions of Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA) after several hours of grilling.

On 14 May 2022, Marathi television actress Ketaki Chitale was arrested by Mumbai Police for allegedly sharing an objectionable post about Nationalist Congress Party (NCP) chief Sharad Pawar.[44] At the time of her arrest, NCP workers mobbed and attacked her and the officers who had arrested her. Chitale, who was molested, and her modesty was outraged by the NCP workers, and was later granted bail, was booked under IPC sections 500 (defamation), 501 (printing or engraving defamatory matter) and 153A (promoting enmity between different groups on grounds of religion, race, place of birth, residence, language, etc., and doing acts prejudicial to maintenance of harmony) of the Indian Penal Code.[45]

Electoral performance

[edit]

General elections

[edit]
Year Lok Sabha Seats
contested
Seats won +/- Votes polled % of
votes
State (seats)
1999 13th Lok Sabha 32
8 / 543 (1%)
Increase8 8,260,311 2.27%
  • Maharashtra (6)
  • Manipur (1)
  • Meghalaya (1)
2004 14th Lok Sabha 32
9 / 543 (2%)
Increase1 7,023,175 1.80%
  • Maharashtra (9)
2009 15th Lok Sabha 68
9 / 543 (2%)
Steady 8,521,502 1.19%
  • Maharashtra (8)
  • Meghalaya (1)
2014 16th Lok Sabha 36
6 / 543 (1%)
Decrease3 8,635,558 1.56%
  • Maharashtra (4)
  • Bihar (1)
  • Lakshadweep(1)
2019 17th Lok Sabha 35
5 / 543 (0.9%)
Decrease1 8,483,632 1.39%
  • Maharashtra (4)
  • Lakshadweep(1)
2024 18th Lok Sabha 4
1 / 543 (0.2%)
Decrease4 TBD TBD
  • Maharashtra (1)

State Legislative Assembly elections

[edit]
Year Vidhan Sabha term Seats
contested
Votes polled +/- Seats
won
% of
votes
Goa Legislative Assembly
2017 10 20,916 Increase 1
1 / 40 (3%)
2.28%
2022 13 10,846 Decrease1
0 / 40 (0%)
Decrease 1.1%
Gujarat Legislative Assembly
2017 182 1,84,815 Decrease 1
1 / 182 (0.5%)
0.62%
2022 2 76,949 Decrease 1
0 / 182 (0%)
Decrease0.36%
Jharkhand Legislative Assembly
2019 7 63,320 Increase 1
1 / 81 (1%)
0.42%
Kerala Legislative Assembly
2016 4 2,37,408 Steady
2 / 140 (1%)
1.17%
2021 3 2,06,130 Steady
2 / 140 (1%)
0.99%
Maharashtra Legislative Assembly
1999 10th Vidhan Sabha 223 74,25,427 Increase58
58 / 288 (20%)
22.60%
2004 11th Vidhan Sabha 124 78,41,962 Increase13
71 / 288 (25%)
18.75%
2009 12th Vidhan Sabha 113 74,20,212 Decrease9
62 / 288 (22%)
16.37%
2014 13th Vidhan Sabha 278 91,22,285 Decrease21
41 / 288 (14%)
17.24%
2019 14th Vidhan Sabha 125 92,16,919 Increase13
54 / 288 (19%)
16.71%
2024 15th Vidhan Sabha 64 58,16,566 Decrease13
41 / 288 (14%)
9.01%
Meghalaya Legislative Assembly
2018 6 29,287 Decrease 1
1 / 60 (2%)
1.83%
Arunachal Pradesh Legislative Assembly
2024 Increase 3
3 / 60 (5%)

List of Rajya Sabha Members

[edit]
No. Name Date of Appointment Date of Retirement Duration
1 Praful Patel 05-Jul-2022 27-Feb-2024 6 years, 27 days
21-Jun-2024 02-Jul-2028
2 Sunetra Pawar 18-Jun-2024 08-Jul-2028 3 years, 356 days
3 Nitin Patil 27-Aug-2024 08-Jul-2028 3 years, 316 days

List of Members of Lok Sabha

[edit]
Election Year Portrait MP Constituency State
2024 Sunil Tatkare Raigad Maharashtra
17th Lok Sabha
2019 Mohammed Faizal Padippura Lakshadweep Lakshadweep
Supriya Sule Baramati Maharashtra
Amol Kolhe Shirur
Udayanraje Bhosale Satara
2019
By-election
Shriniwas Patil
16th Lok Sabha
2014 Tariq Anwar Katihar Bihar
Mohammed Faizal Padippura Lakshadweep Lakshadweep
Supriya Sule Baramati Maharashtra
Dhananjay Mahadik Kolhapur
Udayanraje Bhosale Satara
Vijaysinh Mohite–Patil Madha
2018
By-Election
Madhukar Kukde Bhandara–Gondiya
15th Lok Sabha
2009 Praful Patel Bhandara–Gondiya Maharashtra
Sameer Bhujbal Nashik
Sanjeev Naik Thane
Sanjay Dina Patil Mumbai North East
Supriya Sule Baramati
Padamsinh Bajirao Patil Osmanabad
Sharad Pawar Madha
Udayanraje Bhosale Satara
Agatha K Sangma Tura (ST) Meghalaya
14th Lok Sabha
2004 Devidas Anandrao Pingale Nashik Maharashtra
Adv. Vasantrao J More
(Elected on 12.4.2007)
Erandol
Suryakanta Patil Hingoli
Jaisingrao Gaikwad Patil Beed
Tukaram Gangadhar Gadakh Ahmednagar
Sharad Pawar Baramati
Laxmanrao Pandurang Jadhav (Patil) Satara
Shriniwas Dadasaheb Patil Karad
Nivedita Sambhajirao Mane Ichalkaranji
Sadashivrao Dadoba Mandlik Kolhapur
Elected on
19.02.2006
Resigned in
March 2008
P. A. Sangma Tura Meghalaya
Elected in
May 2008
Agatha Sangma
13th Lok Sabha
1999 Ashok Namdeorao Mohol Khed Maharashtra
Sharadchandra Govindrao Pawar Baramati
Laxmanrao Pandurang Jadhav (Patil) Satara
Shriniwas Dadasaheb Patil Karad
Nivedita Sambhajirao Mane Ichalkaranji
Sadashivrao Dadoba Mandlik Kolhapur
Holkhomang Haokip Outer Manipur (ST) Manipur
Purano Agitok Sangma Tura Meghalaya

List of State Ministers

[edit]

List of Deputy Chief Ministers

[edit]
List of Deputy Chief Ministers of Maharashtra
Nos. Portrait Chief Minister Term Starts Term Ends Duration Ministry
1. Chhagan Bhujbal Vilasrao Deshmukh 18-October-1999 23-December-2003 4 years 66 days 6 years 39 days First Deshmukh ministry
Sushilkumar Shinde Sushilkumar Shinde ministry
Ashok Chavan 8-December-2008 7-November-2009 1 year 338 days First Ashok Chavan ministry
7-November-2009 11-November-2010 Second Ashok Chavan ministry
2. Vijaysinh Mohite–Patil Sushilkumar Shinde 25-December-2003 1-November-2004 312 days Sushilkumar Shinde ministry
3. R. R. Patil Vilasrao Deshmukh 1-November-2004 9-December-2008 4 years 37 days Second Deshmukh ministry
4. Ajit Pawar Prithviraj Chavan 11-November-2010 25-September- 2012 1 year 319 days 7 years 234 days Prithviraj Chavan ministry
7-December-2012 28-September-2014 1 year 219 days
Devendra Fadnavis 23-November-2019 26-November-2019 3 days Second Fadnavis ministry
Uddhav Thackeray 30-December-2019 29-June-2022 2 years 181 days Thackeray ministry
Eknath Shinde 2-July-2023 5-December-2024 1 year 156 days Eknath Shinde ministry
Devendra Fadnavis 5-December-2024 Incumbent 8 days Third Fadnavis ministry

List of Ministers under Vilasrao Deshmukh

[edit]
List of NCP Ministers in First Deshmukh ministry(18-Oct-1999-16-January-2003)
Nos. Ministers CM
Cabinet Minister Vilasrao Deshmukh
1. Chhagan Bhujbal
2. Padamsinh Bajirao Patil
3. Vijaysinh Mohite–Patil
4. Madhukar Pichad
5. Ajit Pawar
6. Vikramsinh Patankar
7. Datta Meghe
8. Vasant Chavan
9. Digvijay Khanvilkar
10. R. R. Patil
11. Dilip Walse Patil
12. Jayant Patil
Minister of State(MoS)
13. Arjun Tulshiram Pawar
14. Laxam Dhoble
15. Babasaheb Kupekar
16. Anil Deshmukh
17. Jaydattaji Kshirsagar
18. Hemant Deshmukh
19. Vimal Mundada
20. Ramraje Naik Nimbalkar
21. Sunil Tatkare
22. Subhash Thakre
23. N. P. Hirani

List of Ministers under Sushilkumar Shinde

[edit]
List of NCP Ministers in Sushilkumar Shinde ministry(18-January-2003-1-November-2004)
Nos. Ministers CM
Cabinet Minister Sushilkumar Shinde
1. Chhagan Bhujbal
2. Padamsinh Bajirao Patil
3. Vijaysinh Mohite–Patil
4. Ajit Pawar
5. Vikramsinh Patankar
6. Vasant Chavan
7. R. R. Patil
8. Jayant Patil

List of Ministers under Vilasrao Deshmukh

[edit]
List of NCP Ministers in Second Deshmukh ministry(1-November-2004-10-December-2008)
Nos. Ministers CM
Cabinet Minister Vilasrao Deshmukh
1. Chhagan Bhujbal
2. Vijaysinh Mohite–Patil
3. Ajit Pawar
4. R. R. Patil
5. Dilip Walse Patil
6. Jayant Patil
7. Ganesh Naik
8. Suresh Jain
9. Nawab Malik
10. Manohar Naik
11. Vijaykumar Krishnarao Gavit
12. Babanrao Pachpute
13. Anil Deshmukh
14. Vimal Mundada
15. Ramraje Naik Nimbalkar
16. Sunil Tatkare

List of Ministers under Ashok Chavan

[edit]
List of NCP Ministers in First Ashok Chavan ministry(1-November-2009-10-December-2008)
Nos. Ministers CM
Cabinet Minister Ashok Chavan
1. Chhagan Bhujbal
2. Ajit Pawar
3. R. R. Patil
4. Dilip Walse Patil
5. Jayant Patil
6. Ganesh Naik
7. Ramesh Bang
8. Nawab Malik
9. Manohar Naik
10. Vijaykumar Krishnarao Gavit
11. Babanrao Pachpute
12. Vimal Mundada
13. Ramraje Naik Nimbalkar
14. Sunil Tatkare
15. Rajendra Shingne
16. Rajesh Tope
List of NCP Ministers in Second Ashok Chavan ministry(1-November-2004-10-December-2008)
Nos. Ministers CM
Cabinet Minister Ashok Chavan
1. Chhagan Bhujbal
2. R. R. Patil
3. Jayant Patil
4. Ganesh Naik
5. Ajit Pawar
6. Anil Deshmukh
7. Sunil Tatkare
8. Laxmanrao Dhobale
9. Jaydutt Kshirsagar
10. Manohar Naik
11. Vijaykumar Krishnarao Gavit
12. Ramraje Naik Nimbalkar
13. Babanrao Pachpute
14. Rajesh Tope
Minister of State(MoS)
15. Bhaskar Jadhav
16. Prakash Solande
17. Sachin Mohan Ahir
18. Fouzia Khan
19. Gulabrao Baburao Deokar

List of Ministers under Prithviraj Chavan

[edit]
List of NCP Ministers in Prithviraj Chavan ministry(11-November-2010-16-September-2014)
Nos. Ministers CM
Cabinet Minister Prithviraj Chavan
1. Chhagan Bhujbal
2. Ajit Pawar
3. R. R. Patil
4. Sunil Tatkare
5. Jayant Patil
6. Hasan Mushrif
7. Jaydattaji Kshirsagar
8. Jitendra Awhad
9. Vijaykumar Krishnarao Gavit
10. Anil Deshmukh
11. Rajesh Tope
12. Shashikant Shinde
13. Babanrao Pachpute
14. Ramraje Naik Nimbalkar
15. Madhukar Pichad
16. Laxman Dhobale
Minister of State(MoS)
17. Uday Samant
18. Bhaskar Jadhav
19. Prakashdada Solanke
20. Sachin Ahir
21. Fouzia Khan
22. Gulabrao Deokar

List of Ministers under Devendra Fadnavis

[edit]
List of NCP Ministers in Second Fadnavis ministry(23-November-2019-28-November-2019)
Nos. Ministers CM
Cabinet Minister Devendra Fadnavis
1. Ajit Pawar

List of Ministers under Uddhav Thackeray

[edit]
List of NCP Ministers in Uddhav Thackeray ministry(28-November-2019-29-June-2022)
Nos. Ministers CM
Cabinet Minister Uddhav Thackeray
1. Chhagan Bhujbal
2. Ajit Pawar
3. Dilip Walse Patil
4. Dhananjay Munde
5. Jayant Patil
8. Jitendra Awhad
9. Nawab Malik
10. Anil Deshmukh
11. Rajesh Tope
12. Rajendra Shingne
13. Shamrao Pandurang Patil
14. Hasan Mushrif
Minister of State(MoS)
15. Prajakt Tanpure
16. Dattatray Vithoba Bharne
17. Sanjay Bansode
18. Aditi Tatkare

List of Ministers under Eknath Shinde

[edit]
List of NCP Ministers in Eknath Shinde ministry(30-June-2022-5-December-2024)
Nos. Ministers CM
Cabinet Minister Eknath Shinde
1. Chhagan Bhujbal
2. Ajit Pawar
3. Dilip Walse Patil
4. Dhananjay Munde
5. Aditi Tatkare
6. Sanjay Bansode
7. Dharamrao Baba Atram
8. Anilkumar Patel
9. Hasan Mushrif

Ministers under Devendra Fadnavis

[edit]
List of NCP Ministers in Third Fadnavis ministry(5-December-2024-till date)
Nos. Ministers CM
Cabinet Minister Devendra Fadnavis
1. Ajit Pawar
2. Hasan Mushrif
3. Aditi Tatkare
4. Dhananjay Munde
5. Babasaheb Patil
6. Makrand Jadhav - Patil
7. Narhari Zirwal
8. Manikrao Kokate
9. Dattatray Vithoba Bharne
Minister of State(MoS)
10. Indranil Naik

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
1.^ Praful Patel, Sunetra Pawar and Nitin Patil from Rajya Sabha and Sunil Tatkare from Lok Sabha.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "'Ideology is secular, cannot compromise on it at all': Ajit Pawar stands firm on secularism, leaves CM question hanging in Mahayuti alliance". Business Today.
  2. ^ "Can Ajit Pawar's pink strategy turn around NCP's fortunes?".
  3. ^ "NCP, TMC and CPI lose national party status, AAP earns coveted tag". India: India Today. 2013. Retrieved 10 April 2023.
  4. ^ "Recognized Political Parties:ECI". 26 September 2018.
  5. ^ "NPP Becomes First Political Outfit from the Northeast to get Status of National Party". 7 June 2019.
  6. ^ a b "NCP Working Committee Approves Decision To Expel NCP Leaders Including Praful Patel And Sunil Tatkare". Punekar News. 6 July 2023. Retrieved 1 August 2023.
  7. ^ Ajit Pawar Maharashtra Deputy Cm: Ajit Pawar joins NDA govt, takes oath as deputy CM of Maharashtra - The Economic Times
  8. ^ Tupe, Priyanka (17 October 2024). "Ajit Pawar Goes Pink: Are Maharashtra's Women Ready for a 'Dada' Makeover?". BehanBox. Retrieved 23 November 2024.
  9. ^ "Can Ajit Pawar's pink strategy turn around NCP's fortunes?".
  10. ^ "Senior Congress leaders quit in Jharkhand". Archived from the original on 4 March 2019. Retrieved 30 June 2019.
  11. ^ CWC expels threesome for six years
  12. ^ "Sangma meets Sonia Gandhi, first time in a decade". The Times of India. 2 June 2009. Archived from the original on 24 October 2012.
  13. ^ "Spotlight: Merger with NCP". Tribune India. 11 June 1999. Retrieved 19 May 2009.
  14. ^ Suhas Palshikar; Prerna Singh; Atul Kohli (4 January 2013). Routledge Handbook of Indian Politics. Routledge. pp. 92, 97. ISBN 978-1-135-12275-1.
  15. ^ "I have quit NCP, will contest presidential polls: PA Sangma". The Times of India. 29 June 2012.
  16. ^ "Congress-NCP announce seat-sharing for Maharashtra polls". 16 September 2019.
  17. ^ "Raj Thackeray, Dhananjay Munde in demand to campaign for Cong". April 11. PTI. 2019.
  18. ^ "Opinion Poll: BJP-Shiv Sena may lose 8 seats in Maharashtra, Congress-NCP to improve figures". No. March 23. New Nation. 2019.
  19. ^ "NCP will welcome BJP's decision to merge India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, says Maharashtra minister". Scroll.in. 23 November 2020.
  20. ^ "| eSakal". Archived from the original on 8 June 2019. Retrieved 26 December 2019.
  21. ^ "Political drama has gripped the home state of Bollywood". No. 30 November 2019. The Economist. Retrieved 30 November 2019.
  22. ^ "Maharashtra: With 169 votes, Uddhav-led govt sails through Assembly floor test, BJP stages walkout". Indian Express. No. 30 November 2019. Indian Express newspapers. Retrieved 30 November 2019.
  23. ^ "36 districts, 31 departments & 2-man cabinet: No expansion of Shinde govt for 3 weeks & counting". ThePrint. 22 July 2022.
  24. ^ "Sharad Pawar Dissolves All Units Of Party, Days After Shiv Sena Coup".
  25. ^ "In a twist, NCP's Ajit Pawar takes oath as Maharashtra deputy CM". The Hindu. 2 July 2023. ISSN 0971-751X. Retrieved 9 July 2023.
  26. ^ "Ajit Pawar moves Election Commission, says he was elected NCP president on June 30". The Hindu. 5 July 2023. ISSN 0971-751X. Retrieved 9 July 2023.
  27. ^ "From Ajit Pawar's speech: 'Stuck at DyCM, I also wish to lead state' to Sharad Pawar 'talking to BJP' several times". The Indian Express. 6 July 2023. Retrieved 9 July 2023.
  28. ^ "Sharad Pawar faction gets new name day after Ajit camp declared 'real' NCP". Express News service. New Delhi. Retrieved 7 February 2024.
  29. ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 August 2018. Retrieved 3 April 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  30. ^ "Symbols" (PDF). eci.nic.in. 2009.
  31. ^ "Nationalist Congress Party (NCP) – Party History, Symbol, Founders, Election Results and News". www.elections.in.
  32. ^ "The legend of Ram – a conversation with Ram Jethmalani". Algebra talks. Algebra. Retrieved 13 June 2018.
  33. ^ "Ram Jethmalani, Sharad Pawar spar over Dawood Ibrahim". India Today. 4 July 2015. Retrieved 13 June 2018.
  34. ^ "Sharad Pawar: Jethmalani's proposal on Dawood Ibrahim was conditional". The Indian Express. Retrieved 13 June 2018.
  35. ^ "Moral police hit Pune nightlife". The Indian Express. 11 May 2011. Retrieved 8 December 2014.
  36. ^ Damini Berry (2 December 2008). "Minister paid dearly for the 'small incident' remark". Merinews. Retrieved 18 July 2018.
  37. ^ "RR Patil has a language problem, calls attack small". News18 India. 29 November 2008. Retrieved 18 July 2018.
  38. ^ "Ajit Pawar apologizes again, says 'this is biggest mistake of my life'". The Times of India. 8 April 2013. Archived from the original on 1 June 2013. Retrieved 9 May 2013.
  39. ^ "Anil Deshmukh: Rise and slow eclipse of leader who helmed ministry in many a govt". 21 March 2021.
  40. ^ "Sharad Pawar to meet Uddhav Thackeray, decision on Anil Deshmukh today". Mid-day. 22 March 2021.
  41. ^ "Deshmukh case: ED summons Maha minister Anil Parab in money laundering case". Business Standard India. Press Trust of India. 29 August 2021. Retrieved 23 September 2021.
  42. ^ Joshi, Neha (23 February 2022). "Maharashtra minister Nawab Malik remanded to 8-day ED custody in Dawood Ibrahim money laundering case". Bar and Bench. Retrieved 23 February 2022.
  43. ^ Mishra, Sohit Rakesh (23 February 2022). Kumar, Akhil (ed.). "Minister Nawab Malik Arrested, Maharashtra Government Says "Won't Sack Him"". NDTV. Retrieved 23 February 2022.
  44. ^ "Who is Ketaki Chitale? The Marathi actor arrested for posting derogatory remarks against Sharad Pawar". 14 May 2022.
  45. ^ ""Pawar Is Not A Religion": Actor Ketaki Chitale Who Was Jailed For Post".
[edit]