Is this the world\\\'s biggest election loser?
Monday, 7 April 2014
He has stood in every Indian parliamentary election since 1962 – and lost every one – but that has not deterred 78-year-old Shyam Babu Subudhi from throwing his hat into the ring once again. Dr Subudhi is a homeopathy practitioner in Berhampur, a town in the eastern Indian state of Orissa. And he is contesting two constituencies, Berhampur and Aska, in Lok Sabha polls. Despite losing his deposit in every previous election, having won less than a sixth of the votes cast each time, Dr Subudhi is surprisingly confident he can win both seats this time. His one-page election manifesto even claims that there is “enough of a possibility” of him being appointed prime minister of India after the coming elections. This will be his 13th attempt in a row to enter India’s parliament. “People are fed up with the current crop of leaders, who switch parties when they are not given a ticket by their own party. They have seen that I am the only person who has steadfastly refused to join any political party since the 1960s,” Dr Subudhi told BBC at his home in Berhampur. Dr Subudhi’s electoral debut came in 1957, when he battled former State Minister Brundaban Nayak over the setting up of a school in Berhampur. “I fought with him in the Hinjili Assembly constituency and lost narrowly,” he says proudly. The high point of his long electoral career came in 1996 when he “fought” the Prime Minister of India, PV Narasimha Rao, for the Berhampur seat. Biju Patnaik, father of Orissa’s current chief minister and the biggest political leader in the state’s post-independence history, is among his other notable rivals, according to UNB.