His legacy is simple: He proved that in Indian politics, kindness is not a weakness. It is, perhaps, the most durable weapon of all. As Madhya Pradesh moves into a new era, it will remember its Mama —not for towering skyscrapers or grand visions, but for the quiet assurance that a farmer’s brother was at the helm.
For a decade and a half, he defied the anti-incumbency wave that toppled giants like Congress’s Digvijaya Singh and even his own BJP colleagues in other states. He won in 2003, 2008, 2013, and then again in 2020 after a brief, tumultuous Congress interregnum. m s chouhan
Born into a farmer’s family in Jait, a small village in Sehore district, Chouhan never shed his rural roots. Unlike the dynasts and the technocrats, he wore his agrarian identity like a badge of honor. When he spoke of wheat procurement, loan waivers, or the price of soybeans, it wasn’t policy jargon—it was a family conversation. His legacy is simple: He proved that in