Close X
Tuesday, November 26, 2024
ADVT 
India

Meet Punjab's ministerial family - the Badals!

Jaideep Sarin Darpan, 28 May, 2014 11:21 AM
    Punjab's ruling elite - the Badal family - is a ministry in itself.
     
    Monday's inclusion of Harsimrat Kaur Badal, wife of Punjab's powerful Deputy Chief Minister and Shiromani Akali Dal president Sukhbir Singh Badal and daughter-in-law of Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal, as a cabinet minister in Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government has ensured that each member of the Badal family holds a top ministerial post.
     
    The Badal family now has a chief minister, a deputy chief minister, a union cabinet minister and two state cabinet ministers.
     
    The state cabinet ministers are the senior Badal's son-in-law Adesh Pratap Singh Kairon and the younger Badal's brother-in-law Bikram Singh Majithia. 
     
    The Badal family, in fact, opted for Harsimrat Badal overlooking the claims of other senior and much more experienced Akali Dal leaders like Ranjit Singh Brahmpura, Naresh Gujral and former union minister Sukhdev Singh Dhindsa.
     
    The BJP leadership, including Modi, which has often been critical of the Congress leaders for not looking beyond the Congress' first family - the Gandhis - conveniently chose to look the other way while accommodating Harsimrat Badal.
     
    "This clearly demonstrates the BJP's double standards on dynasty politics. When it comes to its alliance partner Akali Dal, the BJP shuts its eyes," a senior BJP leader from Punjab told IANS.
     
     
    A greenhorn as far as administrative experience is concerned, Harsimrat Badal not only made it to the downsized new central government but did so with full cabinet status. Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal and his son ensured that she got the cabinet berth and was not inducted as a junior minister.
     
    "I think that senior Akali leaders like Brahmpura should have been in the Modi ministry instead of her," former chief minister and Amritsar MP Amarinder Singh said.
     
    Running the government as a "family affair" is nothing new for Chief Minister Badal.
    When he assumed office for the fifth time in March 2012, he had a handful of relatives in the 18-member ministry.
     
    Besides Badal as chief minister and his son Sukhbir Badal as the deputy chief minister, Badal's son-in-law Adesh Pratap Singh Kairon, Sukhbir Badal's brother-in-law (Harsimrat Badal's brother) Bikram Singh Majithia and another Badal relative, Janmeja Singh Sekhon, were inducted in the ministry.
     
    Kairon was inducted despite barely managing to win his assembly seat by just 59 votes.
     
    Even in 2007, when Badal became chief minister for the fourth time, four relatives found place in his ministry. Majithia was also inducted later.
     
     
    Senior Congress leader Sukhpal Singh Khaira had earlier pointed out that Badal, who keeps demanding a federal structure of government and decentralization of power to states, had the maximum number of departments of the Punjab government with his clan.
     
    "Contrary to his oft repeated demand for a decentralized power structure in the country, Badal has completely done the reverse in Punjab. He has centralized all power with his family, by keeping 26 of the 55 government departments with his near and dear ones. Of the 45 portfolios held by Akali Dal, 23 are held by the Badal family and the remaining 10 by the BJP," Khaira had pointed out in October 2012.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    'Very sad' Manmohan Singh's family gets divided between BJP, Congress

    'Very sad' Manmohan Singh's family gets divided between BJP, Congress
    Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said he felt "very sad" at his step-brother joining the BJP even as his family literally got divided between the opposition party and the Congress, with another step-brother joining the Congress road show of party candidate Amarinder Singh in Amritsar Saturday.

    'Very sad' Manmohan Singh's family gets divided between BJP, Congress

    PM can't see anything because of mother-son duo: Modi

    PM can't see anything because of mother-son duo: Modi
    Reacting to Manmohan Singh's comment that there was no wave in India in favour of Narendra Modi, the BJP's prime ministerial candidate Saturday said the prime minister was not able to see anything because the "mother-son duo" (Sonia and Rahul Gandhi) were "looking after things".

    PM can't see anything because of mother-son duo: Modi

    Ramdev says 'honeymoon' remark misinterpreted, complaint filed

    Ramdev says 'honeymoon' remark misinterpreted, complaint filed
    A day after his comment on Rahul Gandhi visiting Dalit homes for his "honeymoon" sparked outrage, Baba Ramdev Saturday apologised and said he was misinterpreted, even as a police complaint was filed against the yoga guru in Lucknow.

    Ramdev says 'honeymoon' remark misinterpreted, complaint filed

    Lok Sabha polls to set stage for next phase in India-US ties: Powell

    Lok Sabha polls to set stage for next phase in India-US ties: Powell
    Outgoing US Ambassador Nancy Powell Friday said the ongoing Indian general elections will "set the stage for the next phase" in Indo-US bilateral ties as she pushed for both sides to achieve a trade partnership of $500 billion.

    Lok Sabha polls to set stage for next phase in India-US ties: Powell

    ED chargesheets Raja, Kanimozhi, 17 others

    ED chargesheets Raja, Kanimozhi, 17 others
    A chargesheet was filed in a court here Friday against 19 accused, including former telecom minister A. Raja and DMK MP Kanimozhi over money laundering in the 2G spectrum allocation case.

    ED chargesheets Raja, Kanimozhi, 17 others

    Maharashtra's deleted voters names: parties want repoll, CBI probe

    Maharashtra's deleted voters names: parties want repoll, CBI probe
    The issue of deletion or diversion of six million voters' names in Maharashtra blew into a full-fledged controversy with demands ranging from repoll in all the state's 48 Lok Sabha constituencies to a CBI probe, following an apology tendered by Election Commissioner H.S.Brahma, who admitted to the lapse.

    Maharashtra's deleted voters names: parties want repoll, CBI probe