Digvijaya Singh Vacates Rajya Sabha Seat: Congress Power Struggle in MP Begins as April 2026 Deadline Nears
Digital Desk
Digvijaya Singh won't seek a third Rajya Sabha term. As Congress races to fill the MP seat, Dalit representation demands & internal power tussle heat up.
In Indian politics, a graceful exit is rarely just an exit. When a veteran leader steps back, what follows is almost always a fierce contest for the vacuum left behind. And in Madhya Pradesh Congress, that contest has already begun.
Veteran Congress leader and former Madhya Pradesh Chief Minister Digvijaya Singh has announced he will not seek a third term in the Rajya Sabha, with his current six-year tenure set to expire on April 9, 2026. Rewa Riyasat The announcement, delivered almost casually to reporters in Bhopal — "I am vacating my seat" — has set off a scramble inside the Congress that reveals everything about where the party stands today in MP.
Why Digvijaya Singh Is Stepping Back
The trigger, on the surface, was a letter. MP Congress Scheduled Caste Department President Pradeep Ahirwar wrote to Singh urging the party leadership to ensure a representative from the Scheduled Caste community takes the Rajya Sabha seat from MP, citing the need to strengthen Dalit self-respect, political participation, and constitutional values. New Kerala
Singh responded publicly and swiftly — almost too swiftly for a leader of his stature. He has since clarified that he personally requested the Congress high command not to field him for a third consecutive term, and that this decision should not be interpreted as retirement from active politics. IndiaMART
But political watchers are not entirely convinced that this was purely an act of social conscience.
The Pressure Within the Party
Senior political analyst Girija Shankar told Business Standard: "Whenever a leader makes such statements outside the party forum, it should be understood that his voice is no longer being heard within the party as it used to be. Some time ago, BJP's Uma Bharti did something similar." ANI News
This is a significant observation. Digvijaya Singh announcing such a major decision through a press conference — rather than through party channels — signals a leader sending a message upward, not downward.
Congress sources say Singh recently made a presentation at the Congress headquarters in Delhi regarding strengthening the MP Congress at the grassroots level and organisational reforms, with state in-charge Harish Chaudhary, PCC president Jitu Patwari, and Leader of Opposition Umang Singhar in attendance. ANI News The fact that he is already positioning himself as a party reformer — while stepping away from the Rajya Sabha — tells you he is not done. He is simply changing lanes.
Who Wants the Seat Now?
Three Rajya Sabha seats are falling vacant in MP. Of these, two are expected to go to the BJP and one to the Congress. Names already circulating include former Chief Minister Kamal Nath, former MPCC president Arun Yadav, current state unit president Jitu Patwari, and several leaders from the SC/ST community. Business Today
This is where the real tension lies. The Congress in MP has been weakened significantly after successive electoral defeats — in the 2023 Assembly polls and the 2024 Lok Sabha results. Every aspirant knows that a Rajya Sabha berth may be their only path to staying politically relevant in the near term.
Singh's own electoral record adds context — he lost Lok Sabha elections in both 2019 and 2024. Amar Ujala The Rajya Sabha was, in many ways, the last institutional platform keeping him at the national table. Voluntarily giving it up — or being nudged to — is a moment that changes the Congress's power equation in MP irreversibly.
What This Means for Dalit Representation
Let us not lose sight of the real, substantive issue buried under the political theatre. As Ahirwar's letter highlighted, nearly 17% of Madhya Pradesh's population belongs to the Scheduled Caste community, and they remain significantly underrepresented in the Upper House. India TV News
Whether Congress actually follows through with an SC nominee — or whether the seat eventually goes to a more established upper-caste leader backed by internal lobbying — will be the true test of the party's commitment to inclusion.
Opinion: Graceful Exit or Forced Retreat?
Digvijaya Singh declared that he has always been active in the state and will keep fighting for people and the party until his last breath. IndiaMART Those are the words of a politician who knows his relevance is being questioned, and is determined to answer the critics through action.
His decision to focus on grassroots party building ahead of the 2028 Assembly elections — still over two years away — is either a smart political pivot or a face-saving retreat from a seat he could no longer hold with certainty. Perhaps both.
What is certain is this: the Rajya Sabha seat battle in MP is now the hottest political contest in central India. Congress's choice will reveal not just who gets the ticket, but what the Grand Old Party truly stands for in 2026 — power or principle.
