Team News Riveting
New Delhi, October 19
A staunch follower of Buddhism, Mallikarjun M Kharge was today elected as Congress president even as the grand-old party gets its first non-Gandhi chief in 24 years.
Kharge polled 7897 of the 9385 votes cast while Shashi Tharoor bagged a meagre 1072. Sources said 416 votes were invalid.
The second Congress president from poll-bound Karnataka after S. Nijalingappa in 1968-69, Kharge is also said to be the second ‘Dalit’, after Jagjivan Ram in 1969, to be elected party president.
A self-made man, he is a polyglot, having proficiency in as many as six languages, namely Marathi, Urdu, Telugu and Hindi besides Kannada and English. The former hockey, football and Kabaddi player, Kharge has a degree in Law and was union labour minister in Dr Manmohan Singh’s cabinet.
Widely known in Karnataka as ‘Solilada Sardara’ or the undefeated warrior, the very first election he lost in his political career spanning 50 years was in 2019. He had earlier won 12 consecutive elections to the assembly.
At the age of seven, he had to flee from his village in Bidar district with his father, following attacks by the private army of the Nizam of Hyderabad. He was returning home from the field where his father was an agricultural labourer, when Kharge saw his house set on fire. He lost his mother and sister in the tragic accident.
Kharge chose to make Kalaburagi, a district adjoining Bidar to start his political career. He became the legal advisor to MSK mills in Kalaburagi and a trade union leader of Samyukta Mazdoor Sangh in 1969. The same year he joined the Congress and headed the party’s Kalaburagi city unit.
In 1972, Kharge made his debut into electoral politics from Gurmitkal, a reserved constituency (till 2008) in Kalaburagi district. He represented Gurmitkal till 2008, when the constituency became unreserved and opted for Chitapur, a constituency which is now represented by his son and former minister Priyank Kharge.
In the 2009 Lok Sabha polls, the Congress high command was looking for potential winners for the Lok Sabha polls as the BJP was consolidating its position in Karnataka and had formed the first party government in the South. Kharge was asked to contest for the Kalaburagi Lok Sabha seat. He represented the parliamentary constituency twice in 2009 and 2014.
A practising Buddhist, he established the Buddha Vihar in Kalaburagi, which has a Buddhist temple and a spiritual centre.