
Mumbai, June 12 (IANS) Sunetra Pawar’s address at the Nationalist Congress Party’s 27th Foundation Day marks a clear shift in her leadership approach, underlining an effort to consolidate control within the party amid internal churn and external scrutiny.
Stepping out from the long-standing shadow of her late husband, Ajit Pawar, her “no-nonsense” posture signals an aggressive attempt to consolidate power within a party still reeling from internal shifts and external scrutiny.
The speech reflected a transition towards a more assertive and centralised leadership style, with Pawar signalling that accountability would be performance-driven and that indiscipline would not be tolerated.
Moving past the initial phase of mourning following the tragic demise of Ajit Pawar, she is shifting into an aggressive, transactional command structure.
Historically, the NCP’s machinery relied on Ajit Pawar’s micro-management — he knew local block leaders by name and personally handled administrative bottlenecks. Sunetra Pawar knows she cannot replicate that exact style overnight. By framing the party’s survival as a performance-based metric (“pull up socks”), she is shifting accountability downward.
Sunetra Pawar explicitly stated that she would follow Ajit Pawar’s example in taking tough, uncompromising organisational decisions. This is a calculated double-edged sword. By directly invoking her late husband’s legacy of decisive, iron-fisted administration, she seeks immediate legitimacy among loyalists who might otherwise view her as a reluctant or transitional leader.
She is transitioning her image from a grieving widow to a political enforcement mechanism, especially as critics claim that the NCP is functioning under the grip of the BJP, its junior partner in the MahaYuti. By warning that she “will not hesitate to take difficult decisions,” she is setting a clear baseline that her initial period of observing and understanding internal dynamics is officially over.
A major portion of her speech focused on a strict warning against “divisive politics” and caste-based rifts, while explicitly stating that public criticism or “unnecessary interference” that damages the party’s image will face a severe backlash.
She made it clear that while she respects the seniority, she will not operate as a puppet ruler or a placeholder. By stating that she has “understood and tolerated everything until now, but will no longer,” she is drawing a strict boundary between healthy consultation and undermining her ultimate authority as the party head and Deputy Chief Minister.
While framed outwardly as a commitment to secularism and social harmony, her rhetoric acts as an internal disciplinary firewall. The NCP has faced intense public and media scrutiny regarding its political alignments and ideological consistency. Sunetra Pawar is effectively telling the veterans and office-bearers to fall in line. Her warning signals that localised rogue strategies will no longer be tolerated if they compromise the central high command.
Co-signing the strategy highlighted by senior leader Praful Patel, Sunetra Pawar urged the cadre to intensely focus on building infrastructure in urban centers ahead of the impending delimitation (the redrawing of electoral constituency boundaries). This highlights a sharp pragmatic shift.
Historically, the NCP’s core strength has heavily relied on rural agrarian networks, cooperative sugar factories, and local banking systems. Recognising changing demographics, Pawar is attempting to modernise the party’s voter base. It shows a forward-looking calculus — she isn’t just fighting to preserve her current seat; she is planning for an altered electoral map where cities will hold the ultimate veto power in Maharashtra.
Sunetra Pawar’s speech was less about celebrating a foundation day and more about asserting absolute authority. By declaring her willingness to be unpopular for the sake of the organization, she has drawn a clear line in the sand. The coming months will show whether the NCP cadre views this as a genuine strength or overcompensation.
Political observers said that Sunetra Pawar’s speech is a calculated preemptive strike against internal dissent. She has recognized that showing vulnerability or overly relying on an emotional sympathy wave will cause the NCP’s powerful regional bosses to partition the party among themselves.
By threatening a purge of the underperforming and the intrusive, she has staked everything on absolute dominance. “It is a high-risk, high-reward strategy: she will either successfully tame the party’s warring factions, or accelerate its fragmentation,” they remarked.
(Sanjay Jog can be contacted at sanjay.j@ians.in)
–IANS
sj/skp
