Nationalist Congress Party

The Nationalist Congress Party (abbr. NCP) is one of the state parties in India.[9][10] The party generally supports Gandhian secularism.[2] It is one of the major political parties in Maharashtra. In July 2023, majority of the elected MLAs and MLCs of the party led by Ajit Pawar joined the National Democratic Alliance government, however, all MPs except two are[11] expected to remain loyal to Sharad Pawar. This caused a direct split between the Ajit Pawar-led NCP Faction and the Founder and President of the party Sharad Pawar.[12]

Nationalist Congress Party
AbbreviationNCP
PresidentSharad Pawar
SpokespersonNawab Malik
Parliamentary ChairpersonSharad Pawar
Lok Sabha LeaderSupriya Sule
Rajya Sabha LeaderSharad Pawar
FounderSharad Pawar
P. A. Sangma
Tariq Anwar
Founded10 June 1999 (1999-06-10)
Split fromIndian National Congress
Headquarters10, Bishmabhar Marg, New Delhi, India-110001
Student wingNationalist Student Congress
Youth wingNationalist Youth Congress
Nationalist Yuvati Congress
Women's wingNationalist Women's Congress
Membership2,000,000 (2023)[1]
IdeologyGandhism[2]
Secularism[3]
Liberalism (Indian)[3]
Socialism (Indian)[4]
Marathi nationalism[5][6]
Political positionCentre[7]
Colours  Pacific Blue
ECI StatusState Party[8]
AllianceNationalist Congress Party (Sharad Faction):

Nationalist Congress Party (Ajit Faction):

Seats in Lok Sabha
4 / 543
Seats in Rajya Sabha
4 / 245
Seats in State Legislative Assemblies
Indian states
53 / 288
(Maharashtra)
7 / 60
(Nagaland)
2 / 140
(Kerala)
1 / 81
(Jharkhand)
Seats in Maharashtra Legislative Council
9 / 78
Number of states and union territories in government
5 / 31
Election symbol
Party flag
Website
ncp.org.in

Party formation and performance

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.[13][14][15] When the NCP formed, the Indian Congress (Socialist) – Sarat Chandra Sinha party merged into the new party.[16]

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.[17] On 20 June 2012, P. A. Sangma left the NCP to contest the presidential election, which he lost.[18] 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.[19] 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.[20] Similarly, despite their differences, the BJP and Shiv Sena once again contested the elections together under the NDA banner.[21][22] 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.[23]

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.[24][25]

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.[26] Subsequently, on 20 July, NCP President Sharad Pawar dissolved almost all units of the party.[27]

Ideology

The Mumbai President of the NCP Nawab Malik said that the party advocates for Indian reunification, the proposal that India, Pakistan and Bangladesh become one country. Malik compared this to German reunification: "If the Berlin wall can be demolished then why not India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh come together?"[28]

Party symbol

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]

2023 split

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.[32] 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.[33] 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.[34]

Party leadership

Sharad Pawar, Party President and Former Chief Minister of Maharastra.

The party's primary base is the state of Maharashtra and its leadership reflects that. Since the 1980s, Indian politics has become more dynastic, possibly due to the absence of a party organization, independent civil society associations that mobilize support for the party, and centralized financing of elections.[35] This phenomenon is seen from the national level down to the district level. In that regard, the NCP is considered the party with the highest level of dynasticism in Indian politics.[36] The party founder, Sharad Pawar has many members of his family such as his daughter Supriya Sule and nephew Ajit Pawar holding prominent positions in the party.

SI No. Name Designation
1 Sharad Pawar 1.) Founder and National President.
2.) Former Union Minister of Defence, Government of India.
3.) Former Union Minister of Agriculture, Government of India.
4.) Former Chief Minister of Maharashtra.
5.) Former Leader of the Opposition in Lok Sabha

6.) Former BCCI President

2 Jayant Patil 1.) Maharashtra State President.
2.) Member of the Maharashtra Legislative Assembly.
3.) Former cabinet minister of the government of Maharashtra for Home, Finance and Rural Development.
4.) Former Cabinet Minister of Maharashtra for Water resources and command area development.
5.) Leader of NCP Legislative Party in the Maharashtra Legislative Assembly.
3 Supriya Sule Member of the Lok Sabha from Baramati.

Working President of the Nationalist congress party.

4 Rajesh Tope 1.) Member of the Maharashtra Legislative Assembly.
2.) Former Higher Education Minister.
3.) Health Minister Of Maharashtra Government.
5 Jitendra Awhad 1.) Member of the Maharashtra Legislative Assembly.
2.) Cabinet Minister of Maharashtra.
6 Amol Kolhe Member of the Lok Sabha from Shirur.
7 Mohammed Faizal P. P. Member of the Lok Sabha from Lakshadweep.
8 Fouzia Khan 1.) National President of NCP's women's wing.
2.) Former Minister, Government of Maharashtra.
3.) Member of the Parliament, Rajya Sabha
9 Dattatray Vithoba Bharne 1.) Member of the Maharashtra Legislative Assembly.
2.) Guardian minister of Solapur District.
3.) Ministers of State of Maharashtra Government.
10 Nawab Malik 1.) Member of the Maharashtra Legislative Assembly.
2.) National Spokesperson.
3.) Cabinet Minister of Maharashtra.
11 R.R. Patil Former Deputy Chief Minister and Home Minister of Maharashtra.
12 Thomas Chandy Former Transport Minister
Government of Kerala
.
13 Anil Deshmukh 1.) Member of the Maharashtra Legislative Assembly.
2.) Former Minister for Home Affairs
Government of Maharashtra
.
14 D. P. Tripathi Former Member of Parliament, Rajya Sabha.
15 Reshma Patel General Secretary of Gujarat state Nationalist Congress Party.
16 Dheeraj Sharma National President of the National Student and Congress.
17 Shriniwas Patil 1.) Former Governor of Sikkim.
2.) Member of the Lok Sabha from Satara.
18 Babajani Durani Member of the Maharashtra Legislative Council.
19 P. C. Chacko 1.) Former Member of the Lok Sabha from Thrissur (Lok Sabha constituency).
20 Hari R 1.) Karnataka State President (Nationalist Congress Party).
21 Brij Mohan Shrivastav 1.) National Spokesperson, National Secretary (Nationalist Congress Party).

National Executive

National Office Branch

Sr No. Name Party Post Other Designation
01
Sharad Pawar
National President
02 Supriya Sule National Working President and
03 Yoganand Shastri National General Secretary
04 K K Sharma National General Secretary NA
05 Mohammed Faizal P. P National General Secretary

by Lakshadweep Lok Sabha constituency

06 Narendra B Verma National General Secretary NA
07 Jitendra Awhad National General Secretary
8 Y. P. Trivedi National Treasure
9 S R kohil Permanent Secretary NA

National Secretaries

Sr No. Name Party Post Other Designation
01 Mr. Rajeev jha National Secretary NA
02 Mr. Hemant Takle National Secretary NA
03 Mr. Sachidanand Singh National Secretary NA
04 Mr. Brij Mohan Sirvastava National Secretary NA
05 Mr. Rajendra Jain National Secretary NA

Spokespersons

Sr No. Name Party Post Other Designation
01 Nawab Malik Senior National Spokesperson NA
02 Mr. Narendra Verma National Spokesperson
  • National General Secretary
  • In- charge Media
03 Mr. Brij Mohan Sirvastava National Spokesperson
  • National Secretary
04 Mr. Dheeraj Sharma National Spokesperson
05 Mr. Clyde Crasto National Spokesperson NA
06 Ms. Sonia Doohan Spokesperson
  • National President Nationalist Student Congress
07 Dr. Ms. Seema Malik Spokesperson
  • National General Secretary Nationalist Mahila Congress[37]

Office Superintendent

Sr No. Name Party Post Other Designation
01 Mr. Chandan Bose Superintendent NA

Working Committee Members

Sr No. Name Party Post Other Designation
01
Sharad Pawar
National President and Member
02 Supriya Sule National Working President and Member
03 T. P. Peethambaram Master Member NA
04 K. K. Sharma Member NA
05 Fouzia Khan Member
06 Jayant Patil Member
07 A. K. Saseendran Member NA
08 S. R. kohil Member NA
09 P. C. Chacko Member NA
10 Yoganand Shastri Member NA
11 Mohammed Faizal P. P Member NA
12 Nawab Malik Member NA
13 Narendra Verma Member NA
14 Jitendra Awhad Member NA
15 Y. P. Trivedi Member NA
16 Vandana Chavan Member NA
17 Amol Kolhe Member NA
18 Shriniwas Patil Member NA
19 Dheeraj Sharma Member NA
20 Sonia Doohan Member NA
21 Thomas T Thomas Member NA
22 Saleng Sangma Member NA
23 Madhukar Kukde Member NA

Electoral performance

General elections

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)

State Legislative Assembly elections

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 182 184,815 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 4 237,408 Steady
2 / 140(1%)
1.17%
2021 3 206,130 Steady
2 / 140(1%)
0.99%
Maharashtra Legislative Assembly
1999 10th Vidhan Sabha 223 7,425,427 Increase58
58 / 288(20%)
22.60%
2004 11th Vidhan Sabha 124 7,841,962 Increase13
71 / 288(25%)
18.75%
2009 12th Vidhan Sabha 113 7,420,212 Decrease9
62 / 288(22%)
16.37%
2014 13th Vidhan Sabha 278 9,122,285 Decrease21
41 / 288(14%)
17.24%
2019 14th Vidhan Sabha 125 9,216,919 Increase13
54 / 288(19%)
16.71%
Meghalaya Legislative Assembly
2018 6 29,287 Decrease 1
1 / 60(2%)
1.83%

List of Rajya Sabha members

No. Name Date of Appointment Date of Retirement
1 Sharad Pawar 03-Apr-2020 02-Apr-2026
2 Fouzia Khan 03-Apr-2020 02-Apr-2026
3 Vandana Chavan 03-Apr-2018 02-Apr-2024

State/Union Territorial President and in-charge

This is a list of the official state, territorial and regional committees of the Nationalist Congress Party.

State/UT Committee President In-charge
State Committees of the Nationalist Congress Party
Andhra Pradesh NCP Andhra Pradesh NA Vandana Chavan
Arunachal Pradesh NCP Arunachal Pradesh NA Mr. Narendra Verma
Assam NCP Assam Mr. D D Ahikhari Mr. Narendra Verma
Bihar NCP Bihar Mr. Rana Ranvir Singh Jitendra Awhad
Chhattisgarh NCP Chhattisgarh Mr. Nobel Verma Jitendra Awhad
Goa NCP Goa Mr. Jose Philip D'souza TBD
Gujarat NCP Gujarat Mr. Jayantbhai Patel (Bosky) TBD
Haryana NCP Haryana Mr. Maratha Virendra Verma Supriya Sule
Himachal Pradesh NCP Himachal Pradesh NA TBD
Jharkhand NCP Jharkhand Mr. Kalesh Kumar Singh TBD
Karnataka NCP Karnataka Mr. R. Hari Mohammed Faizal P. P
Kerala NCP Kerala Mr. P. C. Chacko Vandana Chavan
Madhya Pradesh NCP Madhya Pradesh Mr. Hemant Patel TBD
Maharashtra NCP Maharashtra Jayant Patil Supriya Sule
Manipur NCP Manipur Mr. Soram iboyayim Singh Mr. Narendra Verma
Meghalaya NCP Meghalaya Mr. Soram iboyayim Singh Mr. Narendra Verma
Mizoram NCP Mizoram NA Mr. Narendra Verma
Nagaland NCP Nagaland Vanthungo Odyuo Mr. Narendra Verma
Odisha NCP Odisha Mr. Bikram Swain TBD
Punjab NCP Punjab Mr. Gurinder Singh Rooprai Supriya Sule
Rajasthan NCP Rajasthan Mr. Ummed Singh Champawat TBD
Sikkim NCP Sikkim NA Mr. Narendra Verma
Tamil Nadu NCP Tamil Nadu Mr. P. K. Naresh Kumar Mohammed Faizal P. P
Telangana NCP Telangana Mr. Samala Ravender Mohammed Faizal P. P
Tripura NCP Tripura NA Mr. Narendra Verma
Uttar Pradesh NCP Uttar Pradesh NA K. K. Sharma
Uttarkhand NCP Uttarkhand Mr. Divya Nautiyal K. K. Sharma
West Bengal NCP West Bengal Mr. Prabodh Chandar Sinha TBD
Union Territorial Committees of the Nationalist Congress Party
Andaman and Nicobar Islands NCP Andaman and Nicobar Islands Ms. R. S. Uma Bharti Vandana Chavan
Chandigarh NCP Chandigarh NA Fouzia Khan
Dadra and Nagar Haveli and Daman and Diu NCP Dadra and Nagar Haveli Mr. Dhaval Desai Amol Kolhe
Dadra and Nagar Haveli and Daman and Diu NCP Daman and Diu Mr. Dhaval Desai Amol Kolhe
Lakshadweep NCP Lakshadweep K M Abdul Mutaliff TBD
Delhi NCP Delhi Yoganand Shastri Fouzia Khan
Jammu and Kashmir NCP Jammu and Kashmir NA Jitendra Awhad
Ladakh NCP Ladakh NA TBD
Puducherry NCP Puducherry K M Abdul Mutaliff TBD

See also

Notes

1.^ Praful Patel from Rajya Sabha and Sunil Tatkare from Lok Sabha.

References

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