Atishi

Indian social activist and politician
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Also known as: Atishi Marlena Singh
Quick Facts
Original name:
Atishi Marlena Singh
Born:
June 8, 1981, Delhi, India
Also Known As:
Atishi Marlena Singh
Political Affiliation:
Aam Aadmi Party
Awards And Honors:
Rhodes Scholarship

News

Delhi govt introduces new rules to curb financial fraud Nov. 6, 2024, 5:16 AM ET (The Indian Express)

Atishi (born June 8, 1981, Delhi, India) is an Indian social activist and politician, best known as one of the top leaders of the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP; “Common Man’s Party”). In September 2024 she replaced AAP founder Arvind Kejriwal as chief minister of Delhi union territory, the third woman and second youngest person to ever occupy the post.

Early life and education

Atishi, known by her first name, was born to professors at the University of Delhi, where she later studied for a bachelor’s degree in history. She attended St. Stephen’s College, one of the university’s most prestigious institutions, and graduated in 2001. She then completed two master’s degrees, in educational research and history, both at the University of Oxford, England. She earned her master’s in educational research from Oxford’s Magdalen College on a Rhodes scholarship in 2005. After completing her postgraduate degrees Atishi spent seven years in rural India promoting reform in such areas as progressive education systems and organic farming at a grassroots level.

Political career

Atishi joined the newly formed AAP in 2013 and became a key member of the party’s manifesto drafting committee, helping to shape its policies. Atishi was appointed adviser to Delhi Education Minister Manish Sisodia in 2015, during Kejriwal’s second term as chief minister, and she continued in the role until 2018. She is credited with making key improvements to Delhi’s school system, including infrastructure development for government-run institutions and enforcing regulations to prevent private schools from hiking fees. Atishi also helped introduce mass parent-teacher meetings at government schools and a Happiness Curriculum (a program to improve emotional well-being) for students up to age 14.

Atishi contested elections for the first time in 2019. She was unsuccessful in the Lok Sabha polls that year but won a seat in the Delhi assembly elections in 2020. A first-time member of the legislative assembly, she was gradually given charge of more than a dozen government portfolios, including education, public works department, finance, and power. As water minister Atishi went on a hunger strike in June 2024 during an acute water crisis in Delhi. She alleged that the supply of water to Delhi from the neighboring state of Haryana had been curbed, a charge denied by Haryana’s Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) government. She ended her fast after five days when she was hospitalized.

Women chief ministers of Delhi
  • Sushma Swaraj (BJP), 1998 (did not serve full term)
  • Sheila Dikshit (Congress Party), 1998–2013
  • Atishi (AAP), 2024–

Name controversy

Atishi went by her first and middle names—Atishi Marlena—until 2018, when she began her campaign for the 2019 Lok Sabha election. She dropped “Marlena” when her political opponents argued that the name was “foreign-sounding.” The controversy was compounded by Sisodia, who posted Atishi’s caste and religion on social media platforms as clarification but was reprimanded by the Election Commission for violating the model code of conduct that governs the behavior of political parties and candidates during an election.

Chief ministership

In September 2024 Atishi became the most public-facing AAP leader when Kejriwal and Sisodia were arrested and jailed on charges of corruption in their efforts to shift liquor sales from government-licensed retailers to privately licensed retailers. Kejriwal was given bail by India’s Supreme Court, after which he announced his resignation as chief minister of Delhi. Atishi was named as his successor until the next assembly election, making her the third woman to lead the Delhi government after the BJP’s Sushma Swaraj and the Congress Party’s Sheila Dikshit.

Gitanjali Roy