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Why a Thakur huddle in Uttar Pradesh raised eyebrows: 'Was it a veiled message?'

For the first time in recent years, such a large number of MLAs and MLCs from a single caste — Thakurs or Kshatriyas — came together in a show of solidarity.

August 18, 2025 / 12:26 IST
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Although organisers projected the Kutumb Parivar gathering as apolitical, its implications are hard to miss

The gathering of nearly 40 Thakur legislators at Lucknow’s Hotel Clarks Avadh last week under the banner of Kutumb Parivar has injected a fresh dose of caste arithmetic into Uttar Pradesh’s political landscape. While organisers insist it was a cultural-social meet, the timing, scale, and participation have left political observers asking: why now, and why in the middle of the Assembly’s monsoon session?

For the first time in recent years, such a large number of MLAs and MLCs from a single caste — Thakurs or Kshatriyas — came together in a show of solidarity. With about 49 Thakur MLAs in the Assembly, nearly 40 were present, cutting across party lines. Expelled Samajwadi Party legislators Rakesh Pratap Singh and Abhay Singh, BSP’s Uma Shankar Singh, BJP’s Abhijit Singh Sanga, and MLC Shailendra Pratap Singh were among those who joined hands with ruling party colleagues.

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“This meeting cannot be dismissed as a mere dinner or birthday celebration, as claimed by organisers,” said political analyst Suresh Bahadur Singh. “It reflects an undercurrent of unease among Thakur leaders after the 2024 Lok Sabha elections, when many in the community felt sidelined during ticket distribution. The disenchantment that started in western UP, after General VK Singh was denied renomination, seems to be finding organised expression.”

Although organisers projected the Kutumb Parivar gathering as apolitical, its implications are hard to miss because both Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath and Defence Minister Rajnath Singh belong to the Thakur community. With two of the most powerful figures in state and national politics already representing the caste, the decision of nearly four dozen Thakur legislators to huddle separately has raised many questions — is it a bid for greater leverage within the BJP, or a signal of dissatisfaction that the community’s influence is not translating into wider political representation?