HomeNewsOpinionRam Vilas Paswan | A towering Dalit leader and tactful politician

Ram Vilas Paswan | A towering Dalit leader and tactful politician

Ram Vilas Paswan had an important role in the VP Singh government conferring the Bharat Ratna, India’s highest civilian honour, on BR Ambedkar posthumously and declaring his birth anniversary on April 14 as a national holiday

October 09, 2020 / 11:48 IST
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In 1977, the year that Jagjivan Ram was sworn in as the Deputy Prime Minister, the highest elected office a Dalit had ever occupied then in the country, 30-year-old Ram Vilas Paswan debuted in the Lok Sabha from Bihar’s Hajipur with the largest ever victory margin up to that point of 424,000 votes.

In the decade after the political star of Ram, who was also from Bihar, had set by early 1980s, Paswan, who passed away on October 8, emerged the most influential Dalit leader across a wide swathe of the Hindi heartland. He won the Lok Sabha elections in 1980 and 1984, and in the 1989 edition broke his own record by securing a victory margin of 505,000 votes.

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Like Ram, Paswan turned out to be a rare Dalit leader whose popularity transcended his home state of Bihar to Western Uttar Pradesh and outskirts of Delhi. The Dalit Sena, an organisation floated by his supporters, used to pull off well attended public rallies in western UP.

For a few years, and his supporters believed this fervently as they took to raising the slogan “neeche dharti, upar aasman, har taraf Ram Vilas Paswan” (the earth below, the skies above, Ram Vilas Paswan is everywhere), much seemed within his grasp, especially the chief ministerial chair in Bihar and the role of the key kingmaker in the prevalent coalition politics in Delhi.