The Fall of the Captain

Vijayan and his daughter - curious nexus


Power rarely falls in a moment. It corrodes first – quietly, almost invisibly – until one day the people withdraw their consent all at once. The latest verdict against Pinarayi Vijayan in Kerala’s Assembly elections is not just an electoral defeat; it is a moral and political repudiation.

Kerala has long prided itself on political literacy, never political idolatry. Yet Vijayan dared to become an idol! Quite strange given the radical Marxist origins of his politics. Vijayan’s first term as Chief Minister went well, probably because the 2018 deluge in Kerala followed by the Covid pandemic kept him too busy to pander to his own ego.

When the state made him chief minister the second time, first of its kind in Kerala, governance soon became inseparable from Vijayan himself. The party receded; the leader expanded.

Campaigns centred not on collective vision but on a single figure: the “Captain.” What was projected as strong leadership slowly ossified into unquestioned authority. Vijayan became to Kerala what Modi was (and still is) to North India.

But Modi’s party managed to win only three seats in Kerala’s Assembly while the Congress came to power sweeping the polls majestically. Kerala doesn’t think like the other states in the country. Vijayan should have known that.

Authority without accountability breeds resentment in a healthy democracy. And Kerala is a healthy democracy, if little else.

However, it wasn’t all about Vijayan’s gargantuan ego. Corruption was aplenty. Scams and scandals, some of which involved Vijayan’s family members too, followed one after the other in the state.

Malayalis are highly politically conscious. They don’t wait for court verdicts to arrive at their own judgments. They perceived clearly that Vijayan’s government looked less like a custodian of public trust and more like a system defending itself. Vijayan was seen by many as nothing less than a scoundrel dressed in a saint’s apparel. That perception proved fatal. In spite of Vijayan holding up his right palm and claiming quite dramatically, “My hands are clean.”

Perhaps, the most decisive shift was not administrative; it was emotional. In administration, Malayalis are used to corruption of all imaginable sorts and now when the Congress comes to power the situation could get even worse.

Vijayan’s government began to appear distant, even dismissive. Vijayan didn’t want people getting close to him. He told journalists to get out many times. He summarily dismissed questions from ordinary people including party-workers. Recently when a party-worker wanted to ask a question, Vijayan told him bluntly and crudely to “go home and ask.”

Kerala loves dialogues and debates. What Vijayan gave were instructions and orders. The kind of hubris that Vijayan displayed towards the end of his term would never be accepted by Malayalis.

Personally, I think the Congress won yesterday not because of its own merit but because of Vijayan’s demerits.

 

Comments

  1. I do not know whether the anectode is historiographical. The story about Leonardo Da Vinci calling the same young man, he called to sit as Jesus in the studio, to sit for Judas, after a gap of 10 years.. More a Retreat Master's Story? In the original story, the young man turned prematurely old and distraught and dishevelled that Da Vinci did not recognise his identity, as one called to sit as Jesus, now become Judas! There was a Vijyan, just out of college, coming to the Assembly, swining his blood-stained shirt, the symbol of his resistance to the torturous excesses of the Emergencey, only that he did not end his life, in the police barracks of Kakkayam camp, like Rajan, the Engineering student, who could be resuciated even by a Habeas Corpus Writ by his ageing father, Prof. Echara Varier. The second Vijayan, as the Chief Minister, sidelining the rustic but sweat drenched and wise V. S. Now the Pinarai Vijayan, who has stepped down, with his laps heavy with wealth amassed, bereft and forelorn. Abandoned.. The Davinci Sittings.. Power dizzys. It also anasthetice.

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    1. Indeed the transformation of a revolutionary socialist to a swindling capitalist was shocking. Vijayan may go down in history as the man who drove the last nail in the coffin of political Marxism in India.

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  2. Hari OM
    So the second term caused him to think himself best of best and all was his to deal as he wished? Sounds familiar... YAM xx

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  3. That's good news. And heartening. Perhaps people can throw off those leaders that think they're above the law. Is a shift coming?

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  4. If no dialogue goes on we learn nothing.

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  5. Manowara ChowdhuryMay 6, 2026 at 12:55 PM

    I hope people in India become more self aware and stand up against any dictator or authoritarian who places themselves above the nation and its people.People should think and work for the betterment of the country and stop idolizing leaders over the nation.

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    Replies
    1. I had never expected such an utter rout of the Left in Kerala. Even the party cadres abandoned Vijayan's autocracy. That's how Kerala is. India can learn a lesson or two from the state.

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