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M.V. Govindan | The party man 

ByRomeo Minalane

Sep 4, 2022
M.V. Govindan | The party man 

The purportedly self-effacing political demeanour of M.V. Govindan was apparent at his inaugural press conference as the Kerala State Secretary of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) in Thiruvananthapuram on August 26. An emergency State committee meeting had just elected him as the new party secretary to replace Kodiyeri Balakrishnan, who was later shifted to Chennai for treatment.

Mr. Govindan, 69, rejected the suggestion that his elevation portended a shift in the CPI(M)’s politics. Instead, he extolled the virtues of collective leadership. He stressed ideological and organisational cohesion on the political battlefield, while also displaying a disdain for placing the individual above the party.

Born in a working class family in Morazha, Kannur, Mr. Govindan faced political and personal struggles in his life. That Mr. Govindan had once stopped his car to greet his mother, who was engaged in road laying work, is a party anecdote.

He had left his job as a physical training teacher in a lower primary school in his village to become a full-time worker of the Kerala State Yuvajana Federation (KSYF), a precursor of the Democratic Youth Federation of India (DYFI). In the party, Mr. Govindan is regarded as an autodidact and self-taught Marxist theoretician. A CPI(M) insider said Mr. Govindan had never totally shrugged off his teacher’s mantle, given his active presence in party study classes. Over time, he earned the label Govindan Master — a hark back to his teaching days. “The new secretary tends to view society and politics primarily through the prism of Marxist thought. However, he is acutely aware of the exigencies of realpolitik and factors them in decisions,” said the insider.

Lessons from the past
It was not always smooth going for Mr. Govindan in the party. In the late 1980s, his name was reportedly linked to M.V. Raghavan, a communist veteran from Kannur who had triggered a fractious ideological strife in the CPI(M) by proposing an alliance with the Indian Union Muslim League (IUML) and the Kerala Congress. The deviation from the party line led to Raghavan’s expulsion.

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