CM Siddaramaiah pays tribute to M.P. Prakash at 86th birth anniversary
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Karnataka Chief Minister Siddaramaiah on Saturday, 11 July 2026, paid a deeply personal tribute to former Deputy Chief Minister M.P. Prakash, recalling decades of shared political history, at the late leader's 86th birth anniversary event held in Hoovina Hadagali, Vijayanagara district.
Context
Speaking at the commemoration, Siddaramaiah said in Kannada: 'Nanu mattu M.P. Prakash avaru onde kalaghatadalli rajyakke bandavaragadaru' — 'M.P. Prakash and I entered politics in the same era, but he was a far more studious and intelligent politician than I was.' The Chief Minister described M.P. Prakash as a leader of unwavering commitment to social justice who never once compromised his principles throughout his political life.
Siddaramaiah recalled visiting Prakash at his home when the latter was battling cancer, and noted with grief that a man of such clean personal habits — one who never smoked or consumed alcohol — had been struck by the disease. He shared that barely fifteen days before Prakash's death, the two had sat together at Janardhana Hotel and shared a meal of dosas, making the news of his passing impossible to believe at first.
Policy Backdrop
The two leaders were contemporaries within the Janata Parivar. During the government of former Karnataka Chief Minister J.H. Patel (1996–1999), Siddaramaiah served as Deputy Chief Minister, preceding Prakash in holding that office. In 2004, both were among the senior leadership of Janata Dal (Secular), alongside H.D. Deve Gowda, Ibrahim, Sindhia, and others, when internal discussions arose over who should lead a new government.
Siddaramaiah revealed that when the question of the Chief Minister's post was debated within the party, it was M.P. Prakash himself who proposed Siddaramaiah's name, saying 'Siddaramaiah alone should become Chief Minister' — even though Prakash never lobbied for the post for himself. Ultimately, following the formation of the JD(S)-Congress coalition, Dharam Singh was sworn in as Chief Minister, with Siddaramaiah serving as Deputy Chief Minister and Prakash as a Cabinet minister.
Stakeholders and Impact
The tribute carries significance for Karnataka's backward-class and social-justice political constituency. M.P. Prakash was regarded as an ideologically consistent voice within the Janata Parivar, and Siddaramaiah's public acknowledgement of Prakash's role in recommending him for the chief ministerial post underscores the bonds of loyalty within that political generation.
Siddaramaiah also disclosed that when he was building the AHINDA social platform — a coalition of minorities, backward classes, and Dalits — he had invited Prakash to join him. Prakash declined, choosing to remain within the formal party structure, a decision the Chief Minister recounted with evident respect for his late colleague's ideological consistency.
What's Next
The anniversary event in Vijayanagara district is likely to prompt further reflection among surviving Janata Parivar and Congress veterans on the political alliances and social-justice commitments that shaped Karnataka's coalition era. For Chief Minister Siddaramaiah, the occasion also serves as a platform to reinforce the AHINDA social-outreach legacy that continues to anchor his political identity ahead of Karnataka's evolving electoral cycle.