Source: The Times of India, Author: Senthil Kumaran
Everyone in Salem knows ‘Election King’ K Padmarajan. Not because he has
won a single election but because he has lost every one of them. He has been
recognized for his achievement by the Limca Book of World Records as the “most
unsuccessful candidate in elections”.
On Monday, the Salem-based tyre retreader renewed his efforts to “prove that a
common man can stand for elections” by filing his nomination for the 201st time
in Wayanad, Kerala. As to who he will contest against for the seat, it’s
Congress president Rahul Gandhi.
Earlier this week, he had filed his nomination – number 200 – in the Dharmapuri
constituency in Tamil Nadu, where he will be facing Pattali Makkal Katchi’s
Dr Anbumani Ramadoss.
Padmarajan is unfazed. He is in fact, raring to go because in the race he is in
— to create a new Guinness Record under ‘most unsuccessful candidate and most
election contested’ categories — he is on a winning streak.
“My name had been registered with the Guinness Book in 2004 and they also had
entered my name on the website in 2015. But I still haven’t created the
record,” says 60-year-old Padmarajan, who first filed his nomination in Mettur
Assembly constituency in 1988.
Citing Election Commission of India’s rules allowing candidates to contest from
more than one constituency, Padmarajan says he has filed nominations in eight
constituencies including five Parliamentary and three Assembly segments across
the country in 1996. “The EC restricted it two constituencies after I had filed
in eight constituencies that year,” he says.
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Padmarajan says he sometimes gets threatening calls when he files nominations
against ‘star’ candidates. “I was kidnapped in 1991 after I filed my nomination
against then Prime Minister P V Narasimha Rao in Nandhyal constituency in
Andhra Pradesh,” he says. “I don’t know who the kidnappers were but they let me
go.”
His other star rivals include M Karunanidhi and J Jayalalithaa
in Tamil Nadu, S M Krishna, Bangarappa, H D Kumarasamy, Sathanandha Gowda and
Jagadish Shettar in Karnataka.
Though Padmarajan files his nominations in constituencies across the nation, he
does not campaign. The highest number of votes he polled was 6,273 when he
contested from Mettur Assembly segment in Salem district in 2011. “I have spent
nearly ₹30 lakh in 30 years on elections,” he says.
So, why does he do it? To create awareness that anyone can contest, says
Padmarajan. “It is the right of every citizen of India,” he says.