M: S Chouhan [better]

That interregnum—the 15-month Kamal Nath government—was Chouhan’s finest hour. Ousted from power in a dramatic midnight coup in 2018, he retreated to the opposition benches. While others sulked, Chouhan took to the streets, sleeping on the pavement during a sit-in protest, leading a Jan Aakrosh Yatra that reconnected him with the ground. He didn't just wait for a comeback; he walked back to power, reclaiming the chair in March 2020.

Critics called it "freebie politics." Chouhan called it "karuna" (compassion). He understood the calculus of survival: In a state as poor and drought-prone as Madhya Pradesh, a loan waiver or a subsidized meal buys not just votes, but dignity. m s chouhan

But politics is a cruel stage. In December 2023, despite leading the BJP to a landslide victory in the assembly elections, Chouhan was not chosen for a fifth term. The party, pivoting toward a younger, less localized leadership, replaced him with Mohan Yadav. He didn't just wait for a comeback; he

Shivraj Singh Chouhan was never a rockstar politician. He was not a fiery orator like Modi or a street-fighter like Yogi. He was the man you’d find stepping out of his car in the middle of a dusty road to hug a weeping farmer. He was the Chief Minister who held Jan-Darshan (public audience) for years, listening to grievances until the evening lamp was lit. But politics is a cruel stage

In the high-octane, rough-and-tumble world of Indian politics, where aggression is often mistaken for leadership, Shivraj Singh Chouhan chose a different weapon: a smile. For nearly two decades, the man affectionately known as Mama (maternal uncle) to the people of Madhya Pradesh steered the heart of India with a quiet, almost self-deprecating demeanor that belied his iron grip on the state’s political machinery.

Chouhan’s tenure (2005–2023) was a study in contradictions. He was a Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) man to the core, a Hindu nationalist with a conservative social agenda. Yet, he governed with a populist, almost socialist fervor. His government launched the Ladli Laxmi Yojana (a scheme for girl child welfare) and the Ladli Behna Yojana (financial aid for women), creating a safety net that cut across caste lines.

Born into a farmer’s family in Jait, a small village in Sehore district, Chouhan never shed his rural roots. Unlike the dynasts and the technocrats, he wore his agrarian identity like a badge of honor. When he spoke of wheat procurement, loan waivers, or the price of soybeans, it wasn’t policy jargon—it was a family conversation.