Mahayuti

Maha Yuti
AbbreviationMY
LeaderDevendra Fadnavis
(Chief Minister) Eknath Shinde
(Deputy Chief Minister) Sunetra Pawar
(Deputy Chief Minister)
PresidentDevendra Fadnavis
ChairpersonChandrakant Patil
FoundersDevendra Fadnavis
Uddhav Thackeray
Amit Shah
Founded4 December 2014 (2014-12-04)
Ideology
Political positionBig tent[A]
National affiliationNDA
Colours  Saffron
Rajya Sabha
15 / 19
Lok Sabha
23 / 48
Seats in Maharashtra Legislative Council
40 / 78
Seats in Maharashtra Legislative Assembly
237 / 288

^ A: The Alliance is described as a broad big tent alliance, with centre-right, far-right factions and centrist factions

The Mahayuti (transl. Grand Alliance;[5] abbreviated as MY), formed in 2014,[6] is a political coalition in Maharashtra, India. Currently the alliance consists of three major parties — Bharatiya Janata Party, Shiv Sena and Nationalist Congress Party - along with Republican Party of India (Athawale), Rashtriya Samaj Paksha and others.

The BJP-Shiv Sena partnership was particularly significant, as the two parties shared a long-standing ideological affinity. The alliance aimed to consolidate their combined strength by leveraging Shiv Sena's regional influence and the BJP's national appeal.

Under the Maha Yuti banner, the alliance achieved several notable successes, including winning the 2014 Maharashtra Assembly elections and securing 41 out of 48 Lok Sabha seats in the state. However, internal tensions and disagreements over power-sharing led to Shiv Sena's departure in 2019.[7]

The alliance was revived in 2022 following the dissolution of the Maha Vikas Aghadi government,[8] resulting in a faction of Shiv Sena joining Maha Yuti alliance and forming the Government with Eknath Shinde from the rebel Shiv Sena (2022–Present) sworn in as the chief minister and BJP's Devendra Fadnavis as deputy chief minister. later in year 2023 the NCP faction broke with one remaining in MVA while Ajit Pawar led faction joined MahaYuti Government with Ajit Pawar swearing in as second deputy chief minister of Maharashtra. The MY alliance got a huge setback in 2024 Lok Sabha Polls where it could only secure 17 out of 48 seats losing 24 sitting seats.

The MahaYuti won the 2024 Maharashtra Legislative Assembly election in a landslide, securing 235 seats. Two independents also lent support to the alliance, extending its tally to 237. Following the election, Bharatiya Janata Party leader Devendra Fadnavis was sworn in as the chief minister and Shiv Sena's Eknath Shinde and Ajit Pawar were sworn in as deputy chief minister of Maharashtra.

On 28 January 2026, Ajit Pawar died in a plane crash accident after which his wife Sunetra Ajit Pawar sworn in as the Deputy Chief Minister on 31 January 2026. Currently she serves alongside Eknath Shinde.[9]

Current members

Party Symbol Maharashtra Legislative Assembly Maharashtra Legislative Council Lok Sabha Rajya Sabha
Bharatiya Janata Party
132 / 288
22 / 78
9 / 48
8 / 19
Shiv Sena
57 / 288
8 / 78
7 / 48
2 / 19
Nationalist Congress Party
41 / 288
7 / 78
1 / 48
4 / 19
Jan Surajya Shakti
2 / 288
0 / 78
0 / 48
0 / 19
Rashtriya Samaj Paksha
1 / 288
0 / 78
0 / 48
0 / 19
Rajarshi Shahu Vikas Aghadi
1 / 288
0 / 78
0 / 48
0 / 19
Rashtriya Yuva Swabhiman Party
1 / 288
0 / 78
0 / 48
0 / 19
Republican Party of India (Athawale)
0 / 288
0 / 78
0 / 48
1 / 19
Independents
2 / 288
3 / 78
0 / 48
0 / 19
Total
237 / 288
40 / 78
17 / 48
15 / 19

Electoral Performance

Lok Sabha Election

Year Seats won +/- Voteshare (%) +/- (%) Popular vote
2024
17 / 48
24 43.55% 7.79% 24,812,627

Maharashtra Assembly Election Results

Year Seats won +/- Voteshare (%) +/- (%) Popular vote Status
2024
237 / 288
94 49.30% 7.14% 31,849,405 Government

List of Lok Sabha members

# Constituency Name Party
1 Jalgaon Smita Wagh BJP
2 Buldhana Prataprao Jadhav SHS
3 Nagpur Nitin Gadkari BJP
4 Raigad Sunil Tatkare NCP
5 Hatkanangle Dhairyasheel Mane SHS
6 Thane Naresh Mhaske
7 Kalyan Shrikant Shinde
8 Aurangabad Sandipan Bhumre
9 Mumbai North-West Ravindra Waikar
10 Mumbai North Piyush Goyal BJP
11 Ratnagiri-Sindhudurg Narayan Rane
12 Satara Udayanraje Bhosale
13 Raver Raksha Khadse
14 Pune Murlidhar Mohol
15 Maval Shrirang Barne SHS
16 Akola Anup Dhotre BJP
17 Palghar Hemant Savara

List of Rajya Sabha members

# Name Party Term start Term end
1 Vinod Tawde BJP 03-Apr-2026 02-Apr-2032
2 Maya Ivnate 03-Apr-2026 02-Apr-2032
3 Ramrao Wadkute 03-Apr-2026 02-Apr-2032
4 Medha Kulkarni 03-Apr-2024 02-Apr-2030
5 Ashok Chavan 03-Apr-2024 02-Apr-2030
6 Ajit Gopchade 03-Apr-2024 02-Apr-2030
7 Dhananjay Mahadik 05-Jul-2022 04-Jul-2028
8 Anil Bonde 05-Jul-2022 04-Jul-2028
9 Parth Pawar NCP 03-Apr-2026 02-Apr-2032
10 Praful Patel 03-Apr-2024 02-Apr-2030
11 Nitin Patil 28-Aug-2024 04-Jul-2028
12 Sunetra Pawar 21-Jun-2024 04-Jul-2028
13 Jyoti Waghmare SHS 03-Apr-2026 02-Apr-2032
14 Milind Deora 03-Apr-2024 02-Apr-2030
15 Ramdas Athawale RPI(A) 03-Apr-2026 02-Apr-2032

Status in Municipal Corporations

Alliance wise status
Municipal Corporation Seats Ruling Party Last election

Pune Municipal Corporation

References

  1. ^ Ranjan, Prabhash (24 September 2020). "Narendra Modi's Nationalist-Populism in India and International Law". EJIL: Talk!. Retrieved 27 August 2024.
  2. ^ Pal, Amitabh (11 August 2022). "India at 75: How Modi's Rightwing Populism Threatens Democracy". Progressive.org. Retrieved 27 August 2024.
  3. ^ "'Ideology is secular, cannot compromise on it at all': Ajit Pawar stands firm on secularism, leaves CM question hanging in Mahayuti alliance". Business Today.
  4. ^ "Why the Far Right Rules Modi's India". jacobin.com. Retrieved 27 August 2024.
  5. ^ "'Mahayuti' to focus on winning 45 Lok Sabha seats in Maharashtra: CM Eknath Shinde". The Hindu. 18 October 2023. ISSN 0971-751X. Retrieved 7 November 2024.
  6. ^ "2014 saw return of BJP-Sena regime in Maharashtra after 15 years". The Economic Times. 18 December 2014. ISSN 0013-0389. Retrieved 2 October 2024.
  7. ^ Team, ThePrint (11 November 2019). "Is Shiv Sena taking a huge political risk by separating from BJP in Maharashtra?". ThePrint. Retrieved 2 October 2024.
  8. ^ "Maharashtra: The political crisis brewing in India's richest state". 22 June 2022. Retrieved 2 October 2024.
  9. ^ "31.01.2026: Sunetra Pawar sworn in as Dy CM". Lokbhavan Maharashtra.