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Digvijaya Singh

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Digvijay Singh is a senior Congress (I) politician in India and has been the Chief Minister of Madhya Pradesh state for two five-year terms. He was born on February 28, 1947 in the royal family of Raghogarh principality, in Guna district of Madhya Pradesh. He first became Chief Minister of Madhya Pradesh on December 7, 1993 and continued to hold the post till Congress was voted out of power in the November 2003 State Assembly elections in the state. He is popularly known as Diggi Raja. His brother Laxman Singh is a politician from Bharatiya Janta Party.

Academic life

He is an engineering graduate from SGSITS in Indore. He is also a St. Stephen's College, Delhi alumni.

Political career

He joined politics at the age of 24. He became the President of Madhya Pradesh Congress Committee in the year 1984. In 1980, he was elected Member of State Legislative Assembly. He became a Minister of State and later a Cabinet Minister under the MP Government headed by Arjun Singh in 1980-84. He was elected as a Member of Parliament in 1984 and 1991. He has been representing his hometown and constituency (Raghogarh) for many years in the State Assembly elections. However, the man known as "Diggy Raja" to his admirers as well as to his foes, was humiliated badly in the Madhya Pradesh State Assembly Election in December 2004, wherein the Congress was reduced to a strength of 37 members in a house of 230. The BJP captured power with a landslide mandate, securing a mammoth 173 seats. Interestingly, Digvijay Singh had vowed publicly and repeatedly not to take part in active politics for 10 years if he did not win the December 2004 elections. However, he did not keep his word and returned to politics after a very brief break. Ever since his career has just gone from bad to worse. He was appointed the Bihar in charge for the Congress in the November 2005 elections and claimed credit for forging a better alliance with Laloo Yadav than in the Feb 2005 elections. However, all his gambits backfired as the Congress was decimated in the elections, its strength falling to 8 (from 9) in a 243 member assembly. The election also marked a dramatic end to Laloo Yadav, one of India's most enigmatic and rustic politicians.

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