E M S Namboodiripad
joined hands with socialists and freedom fighters like V T Bhattathiripad and M
R Bhattathiripad to protest against the division and discrimination in his
community. He became an important member of the Valluvanadu Yogaskshema Sabha,
an organization comprising of several Namboothiri youth, working towards
removing the concept of caste division in society.
E M S Namboodiripad later joined the
Indian National Congress while he was still studying in college to contribute
in India's struggle for independence.
Socialist and Communist Political Inclination
E M S Namboodiripad was one of the
founders of the Congress Socialist Party, a wing of the Indian National
Congress, in the year 1934. After the political party was set up, E M S
Namboodiripad was elected as the All India Joint Secretary from 1934 to 1940.
He also became a member of the Madras Legislative Assembly in the year 1939. By
this time E M S Namboodiripad had gained a strong foothold in the Indian
National Congress and it was socialism that the politician worked towards
establishing and believed in during his initial years in politics.
It was the love that he felt for the
working class of the society that inspired E M S Namboodiripad to adopt
communism in his political ideologies. E M S Namboodiripad gradually
established the Communist Party of India (CPI) in Kerala. He was criticized so
much for this that he had to go in hiding to remain out of prison.
In the year 1964 a split occurred
among the ranks of the Communist Party of India. The division which followed
saw E M S Namboodiripad take sides with the Community Party of India (Marxist)
CPI (M). E M S Namboodiripad became a member of the Central Committee and the
Politburo of the CPI (M). From the years 1977 to 1992, E M S Namboodiripad
served as the General Secretary of the CPI (M) in Kerala.
Political Life and Achievements
In the year 1957 E
M S Namboodiripad created history by leading his Communist party to victory in
the Kerala state elections. He was the first non Congress leader to achieve
this victory and therefore the first communist leader to organize an elected
state government. E M S Namboodiripad was sworn in as the chief minister of
Kerala on April 5, 1957.
The land reform ordinance and the
education bill were the most popular policies introduced by the E M S
Namboodiripad government in Kerala. However, Namboodiripad had to vacate office
in the year 1959 after the central government invoked Article 356 of the Indian
constitution, dissolving the Kerala state legislature and imposing the federal
rule in Kerala.
E M S Namboodiripad became the chief
minister of Kerala for the second time in the year 1967 after a coalition of
seven political parties, including the Communist party and the Muslim League,
won by a majority in the state elections. E M S Namboodiripad remained in
office for the next two and a half years. E M S Namboodiripad was the leader of
the opposition party in the Kerala Legislative Assembly for two terms. The
first term extended from 1960 to 1964 and the second term was from the years
1970 to 1977.
The decentralization of power and
resources in the state and the spread of literacy all over Kerala was the chief
aim of E M S Namboodiripad throughout his stint as a politician in the Kerala
state government.
E M S Namboodiripad tasted defeat in
only a single election in his entire career. His loss was to K P Kuttikrishnan
(known widely as the founder of the Trade Union Movement in India) from the
Kozhikode constituency. The 1962 Sino - Indian War saw E M S Namboodiripad come
to the forefront in favor of the left wing political parties which had come
under attack for adopting a pro-China stance. While the entire nation was in a
state of confusion, it was only E M S Namboodiripad who stressed that talks
with the Chinese authorities could solve the India - China border disputes.
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