Momentary Suspensions and Revocable Expulsions
REBELS
ALWAYS FIND THEIR WAY FOR A GHAR WAPSI
Vanam Jwala
Narasimha Rao
The Hans
India Edit Page (11-09-2025)
Invoking
the trivial allegation of ‘Party indiscipline,’ Kalvakuntla Kavitha,
daughter of K Chandrashekhar Rao (KCR), was suspended. Yet, as Indian politics
repeatedly shows, suspensions seldom mean permanent exile. Even for this comic
scene, the script may still end with a return, a ritual of reconciliation, a
justification that the suspension was only a misunderstanding, and a reunion
presented as being for the people’s good. Today she is out, tomorrow she may be
back; today she is portrayed as a symbol of indiscipline, tomorrow she may be
paraded as a symbol of unity. Political quarrels, especially within families,
are never final. They are instruments of bargaining, of drawing lines only to
erase them later.
Embarrassing
a leader in the name of discipline, and then in a dramatic reversal bringing
the very same leader back garlanded, praised, and projected as indispensable,
is a typical Indian political scenario. ‘Suspension and to that matter
Expulsion’ are seldom taken seriously; they are understood as pauses,
cooling periods, tactical moves, but rarely final acts of severance.
Examples of
Sharad Pawar, Nitish Kumar, Akhilesh Yadav, and Uddhav Thackeray testify to
this. The cadre may wonder and the public may speculate, but those at the top
know that time heals not through emotion but through political or personal
compulsions and the hunger for survival.
Indian
political system has institutionalized disloyalty as a mode of loyalty. Suspension
is not discarding, but to put on notice until conditions allow return. Likewise,
to be expelled is not to be exiled; it is to be kept in waiting, because, every
individual may matter tomorrow. Party leaders denounce rebellion, but they
rarely close the door, because the same rebel may tomorrow bring the magic
numbers needed to keep power.
Leaders
justify shifts as sacrifices for the people, but people know that the sacrifice
is only of consistency, not ambition. The rebel strategically be able to decide
either to make ‘Homecoming’ or ‘Climb the Ladder’ in appropriate direction.
For instance, YS Sharmila rebelled against INC, sailed with her brother, formed
YSRTP, disbanded for homecoming to become APCCI President.
Neelam
Sanjiva Reddy, Morarji Desai, Jagjivan Ram, VP Singh, Chandra Shekhar, IK
Gujral, Charan Singh, Sharad Pawar, Mamata Banerjee, K Karunakaran and many
others would have been remembered as ‘Trustworthy Loyalists’ to Nehru-Gandhi
Family’s Indian National Congress (INC), and perhaps rewarded with
insignificant positions, had they not rebelled and left the party that
sidelined them.
Some, who
defied and continued, went on to occupy highest constitutional offices, like
President, Prime Minister, Deputy Prime Minister, Chief Minister, Union
Ministers. If history is proof, beginning with Motilal Nehru, his family
members at one time or another rebelled against Congress Leadership or policies
not liked by them, to regain grip.
Everyone
who opposed Jawaharlal, like Sardar Patel, Subhash Chandra Bose, Purushottam
Das Tandon, Pattabhi Sitaramayya etc. were calculatedly and eventually
sidelined.
Nehru,
despite Mahatma Gandhi’s support, could not prevent sparks of defiance from JB
Kripalani, Acharya Narendra Dev, BR Ambedkar, and Syama Prasad Mukherjee, who
resigned when convictions clashed with the party line. Mukherjee laid the
foundations of the Jana Sangh, which decades later became the BJP, an early
example of dissent creating a new ideological stream in Indian politics. In the
Nehru–Gandhi style, Jawaharlal opposed Motilal’s preference for Dominion
Status, though Motilal stayed within the party, but helped found the Swaraj
Party. Such skirmishes were refined by Nehru’s successor Indira Gandhi to suit
her political expediency.
Indira
orchestrated splits and engineered dissidence to silence stalwarts like Kamaraj
Nadar, Nijalingappa, Morarji Desai, Sanjiva Reddy, SK Patil, and Atulya Ghosh,
triumphing over all hurdles. Her successor Rajiv Gandhi, a novice, survived
turbulent times not by his own authority but backed by Nehru-Gandhi Legacy, and
through a ‘Strong Coterie Protecting their Interests.’
Vishwanath
Pratap Singh rebelled, and founded the Janata Dal, which later formed part of
the National Front, and became Prime Minister with the odd support of both Left
and BJP. Chandra Shekhar, breaking away from Janata Dal, too became Prime
Minister with Congress support that lasted only months.
After
Rajiv’s assassination, PV Narasimha Rao, then AICC President and an ‘Implicit
Rebel from Within’ silently challenged the supremacy of the Nehru–Gandhi
Family represented by Sonia Gandhi. He became Prime Minister but paid the price
for suspected disloyalty to her. Since 1998 Sonia has been either ‘De Jure
or De Facto Crown on the Congress Throne’ no matter who served as
President.
She too
faced rebellion before the 2004 polls, when Sharad Pawar who was Leader of
Opposition in 12th Lok Sabha and PA Sangma revolted over her
nationality and formed the Nationalist Congress Party (NCP). Undeterred, she
chose Dr Manmohan Singh as Prime Minister.
Pranab
Mukherjee, who had once left Congress and formed the Rashtriya Samajwadi
Congress after being sidelined by Rajiv, later merged his party back,
thanks to PV Narasimha Rao’s revival of his career. Eventually, with Sonia’s
clearance, he rose to become Rashtrapati during Manmohan’s premiership. Sharad
Pawar, despite forming NCP, too had no choice but to ally with Sonia’s Congress
in the UPA.
Thus,
Indian politics have become a ‘Theatre of Rebels, Suspensions, Expulsions,
Betrayals, Shifting Loyalties, Reconciliations, and Home Comings.’ Loyalty
has been reduced to convenience. Leaders like Ram Vilas Paswan allied with
every major party. Nitish Kumar perfected the art of somersaults. Mulayam Singh
Yadav faced constant inner battles, including with his son Akhilesh. Ajit Pawar
shifted loyalties repeatedly for personal benefit. Eknath Shinde’s rebellion
against Uddhav Thackeray destroyed the Shiv Sena.
NT Rama Rao
of TDP was outwitted by his son-in-law Chandrababu Naidu in the name of
protecting the party. K Chandrashekhar Rao, whose daughter Kavitha rebelled and
was suspended, walked out of Naidu’s TDP, led the agitation for Telangana,
founded TRS, and became Chief Minister in 2014. YS Jagan Mohan Reddy rebelled
against Sonia’s Congress, founded YSR Congress, and became Chief Minister.
The cycle
continues with mechanical certainty. Indian politics has reduced loyalty to a
matter of time. Whether Kavitha continues to rebel or makes a homecoming
depends on the script and screenplay. The question is when and under what
banner this will be staged, which is the larger irony of our democracy. A
system meant to be built on ideals and collective vision has adjusted itself to
shifting alliances and negotiated comebacks.
Suspensions
like Kavitha’s hardly evoke shock; they are seen as temporary interludes in a
larger game where loyalty is measured not in principle but in relevance. The
very idea of homecoming and rebellion for personal benefit has acquired
sanctity in Indian politics. ‘Suspensions, Expulsions, and Homecomings’
have become routine. History has conditioned us to expect Kavitha’s homecoming,
sooner or later, because no door in Indian politics is ever fully shut.
The
revolving door may pause, but it never locks. Every suspension is a negotiation
for revival, every exit a preparation for return by another route into the same
house. The only uncertainty is time-days, months, years, or a single election
cycle. Kavitha’s suspension and possible homecoming are not confined to one
state or party but are a ‘Microcosm of a National Malaise.’
The
constant churn prevents stagnation, ensures that no leader is permanently
silenced, and keeps political competition alive, even if not always noble. In
this sense, every rebel and every homecoming reflect the adaptability of a
system that continues to survive, despite its many contradictions.
Yet, if
viewed with some optimism, such episodes also reveal the dynamism of Indian
democracy, where dialogue rarely ceases and reconciliation remains possible.
Meanwhile,
Kavitha has chosen to quit as MLC and resign from BRS Membership. Chief
Minister Revanth Reddy described the entire affair as ‘Internal Squabbles in
the BRS and disputes in the family, because of a disagreement over distribution
of ill-gotten money!!!’


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