Mumbai(Maharashtra):Not many would have thought before the 2019 Maharashtra Assembly elections that Uddhav Thackeray, son of Shiv Sena supremo Bal Thackeray, could snap ties with his party's all-weather ally BJP, and become chief minister to head an unlikely coalition with the NCP and Congress. Thackeray, considered a soft-spoken man vis-a-vis his aggressive father, took oath as the 18th chief minister under the tripartite alliance in November 2019, the first in his family to hold a public office.
His father, a Hindutva icon who founded the party, had never assumed any position in the government but wielded the 'remote control' over the first Sena-BJP government during 1995-99. An ace photographer, the otherwise affable, mild-mannered politician, Uddhav had displayed combative traits of his father in dealing with the BJP on the demand for rotational chief ministership just after the 2019 Assembly poll results were announced.
He himself said several times that although he was not keen on taking up the top post after the Maha Vikas Aghadi (MVA) was formed, it was NCP chief Sharad Pawar who asked him to on the mantle. But two-and-a-half years later, 61-year-old Thackeray's innings as chief minister came to an abrupt end on Wednesday after Eknath Shinde, a senior Shiv Sena leader, rebelled against him and a majority of Sena MLAs joined the rebel camp.
The youngest son of Bal Thackeray, Uddhav, also known as 'Digga', had started helping his father in party affairs in the early 1990s. A soft-spoken politician, he was elevated to the post of executive party president in 2003 over his younger cousin Raj Thackeray, considered to be more charismatic and aggressive. Incidentally, Raj had himself proposed Uddhav's name for the post at a party conclave in Mahabaleshwar.
This elevation led to a split in the party. Senior leader and former chief minister Narayan Rane quit in 2005, followed by Raj. But through these storms, the Shiv Sena managed to win the crucial Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) and Thane Municipal Corporation (TMC) elections in 2002, 2007, 2012, and 2017. When Bal Thackeray died in 2012, many party critics predicted that this would be the end of the Sena. But proving those predictions wrong, Uddhav Thackeray managed to hold the party together, and also led its transformation into a mature political outfit from its earlier avatar as a party of street fighters.