K. Muraleedharan Explained

K. Muraleedharan should not be confused with V. Muraleedharan.

K. Muraleedharan
Birth Date:14 May 1957
Birth Place:Thrissur, Kerala, India
Office1:Minister for Electricity, Government of Kerala
Term Start1:11 February 2004
Term End1:14 May 2004
1Blankname1:Chief Minister
1Namedata1:A. K. Antony
Predecessor1:Kadavoor Sivadasan
Successor1:Kadavoor Sivadasan
Office2:Member of Parliament, Lok Sabha
Predecessor2:Mullappally Ramachandran
Successor2:Shafi Parambil
Constituency2:Vatakara
Constituency3:Kozhikode
Term Start3:1999
Term End3:2004
Predecessor3:P. Sankaran
Successor3:M. P. Veerendra Kumar
Constituency4:Kozhikode
Term Start4:1989
Term End4:1996
Predecessor4:K. G. Adiyodi
Successor4:M. P. Veerendra Kumar
Office5:Member of the Kerala Legislative Assembly
Constituency5:Vattiyoorkavu
Successor5:V. K. Prasanth
Office6:President, Kerala Pradesh Congress Committee
Predecessor6:Thennala Balakrishna Pillai
Successor6:P. P. Thankachan
Office7:Chairman KPCC Election Campaign Committee
Nationality:Indian
Spouse:Jyothi Muraleedharan
Children:2
Party:Indian National Congress
(1980s2005)
(2011Present)
Otherparty:Nationalist Congress Party
(20052011)
Relations:Padmaja Venugopal

Kannoth Muraleedharan (born 14 May 1957) is an Indian National Congress politician. He was the MP from Vatakara, Kerala. He lost the 2024 Lok Sabha election from Thrissur constituency. He is the son of Congress leader K. Karunakaran. He was elected as an MP from Kozhikode constituency (1989, 1991, 1999) and from Vatakara constituency (2019). He was elected as an MLA (2011, 2016) from Vattiyoorkkavu constituency.

Personal life

Muraleedharan was born to K. Karunakaran and Kalyanikutty Amma in Thrissur, Kerala on 14 May 1957. His younger sister, Padmaja Venugopal, is also a politician. Their family hails from Chirakkal, Kannur. After pursuing BA from Mar Ivanios College, Thiruvananthapuram, he qualified in LLB from The Kerala Law Academy Law College, Thiruvananthapuram.[1]

Muraleedharan is married to Jyothi. They have two sons, Arun Narayanan and Sabari Nath.[2]

Political career

Muraleedharan started his political career within the Congress party as a Seva Dal worker. Thereafter, he held the posts of District chairman and State Chief of Kerala Seva Dal.[3] He was elected as Member of Parliament from the Calicut (Kozhikode) constituency in the General Elections of 1989 by defeating veteran Communist Party of India (Marxist) leader E. K. Imbichi Bava and winning re-election in 1991 by defeating Janata Dal leader M. P. Veerendra Kumar. In the 1996 general election, he lost his seat to M. P. Veerendra Kumar and subsequently failed in Thrissur Loksabha seat in his comeback attempt in the 1998 election, before regaining Kozhikode seat by defeating Janata Dal national leader and former Union Minister C. M. Ibrahim in 1999.[4] Thereafter, he held the roles of General secretary, Vice-President of Kerala Congress Committee (KPCC) and became the President of KPCC during 2001–2004.

In February 2004, Muraleedharan was appointed Minister of Power in the A. K. Antony Ministry, though he was not a member of the Kerala Legislative Assembly.[5] He was required to win a seat within six months to continue as the minister but lost in by-election from Wadakkancherry. Subsequently, he resigned in May that year. He is the only state Minister who was never MLA and never faced the legislative assembly.[6]

In 2005, when the Karunakaran faction of the Indian National Congress party had differences with the party leadership and the United Democratic Front (UDF), some members of the party quit and formed another party named Democratic Indira Congress (Karunakaran) (DIC(K)). They allied with the Left Democratic Front (LDF) for the local panchayat elections of 2005 and had some success.

However, for the Kerala Assembly elections of 2006, DIC(K) made a pact with UDF as LDF declined to make any electoral arrangements with DIC(K). DIC(K) contested in 17 constituencies but managed to get elected only from one seat mostly because of grassroots level cross-voting by Congress. Muralidharan lost the election in Koduvally constituency to P.T.A. Rahim.

With the future of the DIC(K) party untenable, some party members of the DIC(K) returned to the Congress party whilst others, including Karunakaran and Muraleedharan, decided instead to join the Nationalist Congress Party (NCP).

Later, Karunakaran rejoined the Congress party, while his son Muraleedharan opted to stay with the NCP, decrying his father's "betrayal".[7] Muraleedharan contested the 2009 Lok Sabha polls from the Wayanad constituency under the NCP ticket, but came only in third place, behind the Congress party and the CPI.[8]

In August 2009, he was expelled from the NCP and sacked as state chief of the party, as he openly expressed his desire to rejoin the Congress party.[9] He was subsequently refused re-entry into the Congress party, the party leadership stating that the disparaging comments he had made about the party leadership whilst in opposition were too big a barrier to his re-joining.[9] [10] Muraleedharan pledged that he would "wait for any length of time" for the party to change its mind and readmit him, while his father Karunakaran stated that he would take up the matter with the national leadership of the Congress party, if necessary.[9] He was readmitted to the Congress party in February 2011, after his father died, and was given a ticket to contest the Assembly election from the Vattiyurkavu Assembly constituency (former Thiruvananthapuram North Constituency). Subsequently, he won his first assembly election after he defeated ruling Communist Party of India-Marxist (CPI-M) supported independent candidate Cherian Philip by a margin of over 16,167 votes on 14 May 2011.[11] He was re-elected for the second time in 2016 defeating Kummanam Rajasekharan of Bharatiya Janata Party by a margin of 7622 votes.

In Indian general election 2019 he has been elected from Vatakara with a tremendous margin by defeating P. Jayarajan of Communist Party of India (Marxist) by a margin of 84663 votes.

In Indian general election 2024 he was a candidate of Indian National Congress party from Thrissur Constituency.[12] [13]

Election candidature history
ElectionYearPartyConstituencyOpponentResultMargin
Loksabha1989KozhikodeE. K. Imbichi Bava
1991KozhikodeM.P. Veerendra Kumar
1996KozhikodeM.P. Veerendra Kumar
1998ThrissurV. V. Raghavan
1999KozhikodeC. M. Ibrahim
2009WayanadM. I. Shanavas
2019VatakaraP. Jayarajan
2024ThrissurSuresh Gopi
Kerala Legislative Assembly2004 (By-election)Wadakkanchery
2006KoduvallyP. T. A. Rahim
2011VattiyoorkavuCheriyan Phillip
2016VattiyoorkavuKummanam Rajasekharan
2021NemomV. Sivankutty

Positions held

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 13th Lok Sabha: Member Profiles . 29 December 2009 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110703140607/http://164.100.47.132/LssNew/members/former_Biography.aspx?mpsno=262 . 3 July 2011 . dead . dmy-all .
  2. Web site: പത്മജയെ ഞാന്‍ എതിര്‍ത്തിരുന്നു - Page 3 | mangalam.com . www.mangalam.com . 2 February 2022 . https://archive.today/20140224171023/http://www.mangalam.com/mangalam-varika/152777?page=0,2 . 24 February 2014 . dead.
  3. http://www.keralaassembly.org/lok/sabha/biodata.php4?no=61&name=K.%20Muraleedharan Kerala Legislative Assembly: Member profile
  4. https://web.archive.org/web/20090420135556/http://ibnlive.in.com/politics/keycandidate/3462.html IBN Candidate profile: K Muraleedharan
  5. The Hindu, 12 February 2004
  6. Web site: Kerala Government: Council of Ministers (Cabinet) 2001-2006.
  7. Frontline, 19 January 2008
  8. Web site: Indian Parliament Election Results 2009 (Lok Sabha polls 2009)- Kerala.
  9. http://www.newkerala.com/nkfullnews-1-88125.html Kerala leader K Muraleedharan refused re-entry into Congress
  10. "Muraleedharan meets Antony", The Hindu, 21 November 2009
  11. Web site: Triangular fight in Vattiyoorkavu segment . 2023-05-24 . India Today . en.
  12. Web site: Raghunath . Arjun . LS polls 2024: Congress' surprise move to field Muraleedharan at Thrissur creates panic in BJP camp . 2024-03-26 . Deccan Herald . en.
  13. News: Bureau . The Hindu . 2024-03-09 . K. Muraleedharan reaches Thrissur, takes out roadshow . 2024-03-26 . The Hindu . en-IN . 0971-751X.