Short And Intense: Indian Chief Ministers Who Could Not Last Even A Week In Office

Becoming a CM is easy. But holding on to the chair is another matter. Just like former Maharashtra CM Devendra Fadnavis and a bunch of others learnt the hard way

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Becoming a CM is easy. But holding on to the chair is another matter. Just like former Maharashtra CM Devendra Fadnavis and a bunch of others learnt the hard way

It was British Prime Minister Harold Wilson who famously said: “A week is a long time in politics.” That was way back in the ’60s. Since then, politicians have proved time and again that a week is 168 hours. And each of them counts.

There have been times of political turmoil in India when chief ministers have somehow managed to hang on to their office for an improbably short span, until they could no longer do so. The latest among them is the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) leader Devendra Fadnavis who resigned as the chief minister of Maharashtra, three days after he took the oath of office—and twice in 18 days.

Fadnavis was given a day’s time by the Supreme Court, on November 26, to prove his majority on the floor of the House after the Shiv Sena-Nationalist Congress Party-Congress approached the apex court soon after he took oath on Saturday, November 23.

Here is the list of chief ministers, from different parties, with the shortest terms in India. Each of them racing with the other—in the reverse—to enter history books. 

 

Two days:  B. S. Yeddyurappa, Karnataka, May 2018 

In 2018 Assembly elections, the BJP emerged as the single-largest party in the Karnataka Assembly with 104 MLAs. It fell short of a simple majority mark of 111 by seven MLAs in the 221-member Assembly. On the other hand, the Congress and its post-poll alliance with the Janata Dal (Secular) meant that it had 117 MLAs, but the Governor of the state, Vajubhai Vala, invited the BJP under the leadership of B.S. Yeddyurappa to form the government. The Congress party and its partner appealed to the Supreme Court, which then ordered a floor test. Realizing that he did not have the numbers on the day of the test, Yeddyurappa resigned.

 

Two days: Jagadamibika Pal, Uttar Pradesh, 1988

Called the "one day wonder”, Jagadamb...

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