On June 18, shortly after the conclusion of the Rajya Sabha election in Jharkhand, Chief Minister Hemant Soren posted a message on X congratulating the two newly elected members, Baidyanath Ram and Parimal Nathwani. It was Baidyanath Ram’s election that occupied the centre of the message. Describing it as a matter of pride for the State, Soren emphasised that Ram’s victory strengthened the ideals of social justice and inclusive democracy and noted that this would be the first time a representative from the Dalit community of Jharkhand would carry the State’s concerns to the Upper House of Parliament.
An hour later, Soren returned to the platform with another message addressed exclusively to Ram. Framed by the words “Jai Bhim. Jai Jharkhand”, the post expressed confidence that the senior Jharkhand Mukti Morcha (JMM) leader would champion the rights, dignity, and self-respect of Jharkhand while giving voice to the aspirations of marginalised and oppressed communities. Read together, the two messages were more than routine congratulatory remarks. They constituted a political statement whose significance extends well beyond the outcome of a Rajya Sabha election.
That significance is easy to miss amid the controversy that has followed the polls. Much of the public discussion has focussed on the dramatic contest for the second seat. The victory of National Democratic Alliance (NDA)-backed independent candidate, Parimal Nathwani, despite the apparent arithmetic of the Assembly, the defeat of the Congress nominee, Pranav Jha, and the subsequent allegations of cross-voting have generated considerable political turmoil. Given Jharkhand’s long and troubled history of Rajya Sabha elections, where accusations of horse-trading and political bargaining have surfaced repeatedly, the controversy is unlikely to disappear anytime soon.
Yet the fixation on electoral intrigue risks obscuring a more consequential development. The election of Baidyanath Ram, and the language through which the JMM leadership has framed his victory, point to an issue that has historically occupied a far less visible place in Jharkhand’s political discourse: the place of Dalit representation in a State where the political imagination has been shaped overwhelmingly by the question of Adivasi assertion.
Contours of a political tradition
The history of Jharkhand politics is inseparable from the struggles of Adivasi communities. From the early interventions of Jaipal Singh Munda and the Jharkhand Party to the mass mobilisations led by Shibu Soren and the JMM, political demands in the region were articulated through questions of land alienation, resource extraction, cultural recognition, and regional autonomy. The movement for a separate State emerged from these concerns and ultimately transformed the political geography of eastern India. The creation of Jharkhand in 2000 was not simply an administrative reorganisation; it represented the culmination of a long struggle for political recognition by communities who believed themselves marginalised in the larger structures of power.
Babulal Marandi and other BJP leaders congratulate NDA-backed Rajya Sabha candidate, Parimal Nathwani, following his victory in the Rajya Sabha election, in Ranchi on June 18.
| Photo Credit:
ANI
The centrality of the Adivasi question gave Jharkhand its distinctive political character. Unlike neighbouring Bihar or Uttar Pradesh, where caste became the principal axis of political mobilisation, public life in Jharkhand evolved around questions of indigeneity, regional identity, land and resource control. This trajectory was historically necessary and politically transformative. Yet it also had an unintended consequence: other marginalised groups often appeared in public discourse primarily through their relationship to the larger Jharkhand project rather than as political constituencies in their own right.
Among those most affected by this dynamic were Dalit communities. Although Scheduled Castes constitute roughly 12 per cent of Jharkhand’s population, they have rarely emerged as an autonomous political force in the State. Unlike regions where Dalit movements fundamentally reshaped social and electoral life, the energies of collective mobilisation in Jharkhand were largely channelled through the struggles for regional recognition, Statehood, and Adivasi assertion.
This is not to suggest that caste-based inequalities were absent or that Dalit communities lacked political aspirations. Rather, the dominant fault lines around which public life was organised were different. The broad coalitions forged by the Jharkhand movement frequently absorbed caste-based grievances into the wider struggles over identity, territory and self-governance. As a result, while Dalits participated actively in these movements and individual leaders emerged across party lines, Dalit concerns seldom acquired the visibility or independent political expression seen in other parts of India.
It is against this backdrop that Baidyanath Ram’s election becomes politically significant. A veteran politician and former MLA from Latehar, Ram’s political journey has taken him through multiple parties before he found a home in the JMM. In many ways, his trajectory reflects the broader challenges faced by Dalit leaders in Jharkhand, who have often struggled to find an enduring political home in a landscape dominated by regional and Adivasi concerns. His elevation is therefore not merely a symbolic gesture directed at a social constituency; it is also the recognition of a leader whose political career has been shaped by the complexities of Jharkhand’s social and electoral landscape.
The significance of the moment lies not simply in the fact that a Dalit leader has been elected to the Rajya Sabha. Nor is it merely a matter of descriptive representation. Rather, it lies in what the decision may reveal about the changing social imagination of the JMM and the evolving nature of social justice politics in Jharkhand.
New language of representation
The JMM today occupies a position very different from that of the movement it once led. As the principal governing party in the State, it must speak not only to Adivasi aspirations but also to a broader coalition that includes Dalits, OBCs, minorities, and other marginalised groups. The nomination of Baidyanath Ram appears to acknowledge this political reality. It suggests an effort to expand the social vocabulary of representation without abandoning the historical commitments that gave the party its legitimacy.
This is why Hemant Soren’s invocation of “Jai Bhim” alongside “Jai Jharkhand” deserves attention. The phrase symbolically brings together two political traditions that have often developed on parallel tracks. One draws upon the Ambedkarite struggle for dignity, equality, and caste justice. The other emerges from the history of Adivasi assertion and the regional movement for Jharkhand. While these traditions have occasionally intersected, they have rarely been articulated together as part of a shared political language. The significance of Soren’s formulation lies precisely in this attempt to create a broader grammar of social justice that can accommodate both.
Such a shift would not be entirely unprecedented. The Jharkhand movement was never exclusively an Adivasi movement. Some of its most important leaders, including Jaipal Singh Munda, Shibu Soren, and Binod Bihari Mahato sought to build solidarities across communities that experienced different forms of marginalisation. The movement’s enduring appeal rested partly on its ability to imagine a political community larger than any single identity group. Over time, however, the public memory of the movement became increasingly identified with its Adivasi dimension, often overshadowing its wider social coalition. The election of Baidyanath Ram may, therefore, be read as a reminder of that broader legacy.
Of course, symbolism alone cannot transform social realities. The election of a single Rajya Sabha member will not automatically alter the position of Dalits in Jharkhand’s political landscape. Representation is meaningful only when accompanied by sustained engagement with questions of exclusion, dignity, education, employment, and political participation. Yet symbols matter because they reveal emerging priorities. They signal who is being brought into the political conversation and whose aspirations are being acknowledged as part of the state’s democratic future.
The allegations of cross-voting that dominate today’s headlines will eventually fade. What may endure longer is the political meaning attached to Baidyanath Ram’s election. If “Jai Bhim” and “Jai Jharkhand” come to signify a more expansive vision of representation—one that brings Dalit concerns into closer conversation with the historical aspirations of the Jharkhand movement—then this election may be remembered for more than its controversies. It may be remembered as a small but significant moment in the continuing evolution of Jharkhand’s social justice politics.
Kunal Shahdeo teaches at Azim Premji University, Ranchi
Also Read | A Rajya Sabha nomination rejection with wider consequences
Also Read | A challenge to orthodoxy
