Madhu Limaye

Limaye on a 1997 stamp of India

Madhu Limaye (1 May 1922 – 8 January 1995), full name: Madhukar Ramchandra Limaye, was an Indian socialist essayist and activist, particularly active in the 1970s.[1] A follower of Ram Manohar Lohia and a fellow-traveller of George Fernandes, he was active in the Janata government that gained power at the Centre following the Emergency. He, with Raj Narain and Krishan Kant was also responsible for the collapse of the Morarji Desai-led Janata government installed by that coalition, by insisting that no member of the Janata Party could simultaneously be a member of an alternative social or political organisation. This attack on dual membership was directed specifically at members of the Janata Party who had been members of the Jan Sangh, and continued to be members of the right-wing Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), the Jan Sangh's ideological parent. The issue led to fall of the Janata government in 1979, and the destruction of the Janata coalition.[2]

In retirement, through the 1980s, he continued to write; he was especially caustic on Constitutional issues, where he set himself the task of defending the Constitution in the media against those who would seek to modify it to centralise power or to replace the Parliamentary system with a Presidential one, fearing a 'slow slide to despotism.[3]

He showed less antipathy to the memory of Indira Gandhi than could have been expected, reserving his anger for Jawaharlal Nehru, who he seemed to think "could have set a standard beyond reproach, but did not."[4]

  1. ^ Qurban Ali. Short Political Biography of Madhu Limaye. academia.edu
  2. ^ Lloyd I. Rudolph and Susanne H. Rudolph (1987) In Pursuit of Lakshmi: The Political Economy of the Indian State. University of Chicago Press. pp 457–459. ISBN 9788125015512
  3. ^ Roderick Church (1988). "Contemporary Indian Politics, by Madhu Limaye". Pacific Affairs. 61 (3): 536–537.
  4. ^ Leonard A. Gordon (1988). "Prime Movers: Role of the Individual in History, by Madhu Limaye". The Journal of Asian Studies. 47 (3): 683–684. doi:10.2307/2057064. JSTOR 2057064.

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