Son rise in Worli; Sena banks on Aaditya to widen base
The electoral entry of Aaditya Thackeray, first member his family to take the poll plunge, has made Mumbai’s Worli as the most talked about seat and all eyes will be on how the Yuva Sena chief fares.
While the Yuva Sena’s leader win in the next week’s state polls will not be surprising, political observers say the number of votes polled and the victory margin will matter more as the seat is considered a stronghold of the party, led by his father Uddhav Thackeray.
Aaditya Thackeray, 29, whom his party wants to be the deputy chief minister if the BJP-Sena alliance retains power in the state, is pitted against NCP’s nominee Suresh Mane, a Dalit leader.
The constituency, located in south Mumbai, has undergone a sea change over the years-from being a textile hub to having plush skyscrapers and modern commercial complexes.
Worli, which is one of the 36 seats located in Mumbai, overlooks the iconic BandraWorli sea link and houses architectural landmarks like the Nehru Centre, Nehru Planetarium, Haji Ali dargah and the Mahalaxmi racecourse.
Originally a fisherfolk settlement which was part of seven islands of the then Bombay, Worli has grown into a plush cosmopolitan area over the years.
Now, with the Next Gen Thackeray, who is set to contest from the area to carry forward the family legacy, the area is likely to see a change in its political profile also, say observers.
The constituency was represented by Sena leader Datta Nalawade from 1990 to 2004. But, in 2009, Sachin Ahir, then in the NCP, wrested the seat due to vote split by the MNS.
The seat, having over three lakh voters, was retained by Sena’s Sunil Shinde in 2014, despite the party having split with the BJP before those polls.
Even in 2014 and this year’s Lok Sabha polls, Sena’s Arvind Sawant won comfortably from the Worli parliamentary constituency.
Aaditya Thackeray says he wants to make the constituency a “model of development”.
When asked about issues being faced by the area, like redevelopment of BDD chawls, problems being faced by fishermen and traffic woes, Aaditya Thackeray said he wants to project the constituency as a model of development.
“Worli is a mini-Maharashtra, a mix of chawls, slums, towers cutting across castes and communities. The foundation stone for redevelopment of BDD chawlswas laid, but nothing happened. I want to make the constituency a model on how development should be done,” the Sena nominee said.
Worli is a mini-Maharashtra, a mix of chawls, slums, towers cutting across castes and communities. I want to make the constituency a model on how development should be done”