
In the shifting sands of Maharashtra politics, one name repeatedly rises to the center—Devendra Fadnavis. He is not just another politician navigating elections, but the man who has over and over again proved that he is the strategist, the mover, the player who cannot be ignored. His journey from Nagpur’s youngest mayor to becoming the state’s most important political force is not built merely on luck or timing, but on an instinctive ability to read the mood of Maharashtra, to sense when to strike and when to step back.
When the BJP stormed into power in 2014, it was Fadnavis who became the face of that new chapter, the first BJP chief minister of Maharashtra in decades. He carried the weight of development on his shoulders, pushing urban infrastructure, agrarian support, and governance reforms that gave him credibility not just among party loyalists but also among voters who had never imagined a BJP face leading the state. Five years later, when the Sena broke ranks in 2019, he pulled off a breathtaking political stunt by returning to power with Ajit Pawar in an overnight coup that lasted only 80 hours. Critics mocked the brevity of that government, but what lingered in political memory was not the fall, it was the audacity of the attempt. It cemented his reputation as a leader who could turn the tables when everyone else thought the game was over.
That same quality defined him again in 2022, when he accepted the Deputy Chief Minister’s chair to stabilize the Mahayuti government with Eknath Shinde. It was a moment that revealed his understanding of real power—not in titles, but in control, influence, and the ability to hold the system together from behind the curtain. Today, as civic elections approach, he has once again reshaped his image. The sudden disappearance of “Fadnavis” from his name and the emergence of “Deva Bhau” on posters across Mumbai are not random. They are a deliberate play to cross caste lines, to claim the emotional connect that Shiv Sena once monopolized, and to present himself as the brotherly figure every Marathi voter can identify with.
In the posters, he stands before the image of Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj, offering flowers. It is more than homage; it is a quiet declaration that Shivaji’s legacy does not belong to one party, that BJP and Devendra too have the right to embody that vision of justice, courage, and pride. The fact that these posters carry no party name or symbol, only his picture and Shivaji’s presence, shows that he is trying to build a personal connection that rises above organizational branding. And this is happening just as the Maratha reservation decision has set off a credit war within the Mahayuti, making his move even more significant.
What emerges from all this is a portrait of a man who is far more than an administrator. Devendra Fadnavis is the chess player of Maharashtra politics, a strategist who knows when to take risks, when to sacrifice, and when to claim the board. From 2014 to 2019 to 2022 and now to the civic polls ahead, every turning point of the state’s politics has his imprint. He has shown that he can reinvent himself, command narratives, and keep Maharashtra’s politics revolving around his presence. That is why, in the final reckoning, he stands not just as the BJP’s strongman but as the man of Maharashtra.

