
IUML opens doors to women in national leadership. Why Jayanthi Rajan breaks many ceilings
Jayanthi Rajan, a Dalit leader from Kerala, and Fathima Muzaffer from Tamil Nadu, both members of the IUML women's wing, were chosen by the party Thursday to become national assistant secretaries in its national council. Their names were announced at a meeting in Chennai, which also saw the IUML elect a national president and other office-bearers.
The induction of the two women faces is expected to help the IUML shed its image of a 'male-dominated party'. An ally of the Congress, the IUML has often wrestled with juggling between the growing demand for better women's representation in the party and the conservatism advocated by Muslim clerics.
In 2021, Haritha, the women's wing of the IUML's Muslim Students Federation (MSF), had held protests over gender-related issues within the party. After this, the IUML had set up a 20% representation benchmark for women in all its affiliated groups.
Last year, the IUML inducted women into the state leadership of the Youth League, the party's youth wing, for the first time.
The 46-year-old Rajan, who hails from Wayanad and belongs to a family of 'Congress supporters', began her journey with the IUML in the 2010 local body elections, which were the first after 50% seats in these bodies were reserved for women. The IUML looked for eligible women beyond the Muslim community to field, and this led them to Rajan for a ward under the Poothadi panchayat in Wayanad. Rajan by then was already active in social work.
Rajan told The Indian Express: 'In 2004, I began my career with a Church-run NGO, which was involved in women's empowerment through micro-financing and self-help groups. The IUML was also involved in a lot of charitable works in the area and that helped me find beneficiaries… Their involvement in charity and social causes influenced me.'
Rajan won the local body elections as an IUML representative, and simultaneously joined the party's Women's League, going on to become a member of its Wayanad district committee. She was later nominated to the state committee of the Dalit League, which is a wing within the IUML. In 2015, she contested elections to the block panchayat and won.
'For the last nine years, I have been in the national committee of the Women's League. I have never felt odd in the party. The leadership of the IUML or Women's League has never approached me as a non-Muslim person,' she said, adding that things had changed since. 'When I joined the Women's League, there were very few Muslim women in the IUML or its affiliated outfits. Now, we have several educated women in the party.'
On conservative clergy and their objections to women in public places, Rajan said, 'I am only part of the IUML, I need not comment on what the clerics say. In fact, I have shared the dais with clerics too.'
While the reservation of 50% seats for women in local bodies may have led the IUML to open the doors to women candidates at this level, the party has had very few women candidates for Assembly or Lok sabha elections. In the 2021 Kerala Assembly elections, the party fielded a woman candidate, advocate Noorbeena Rasheed, from the Kozhikode South constituency, for the first time in 25 years. Rasheed, however, lost the seat to a candidate of the Indian National League.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New Indian Express
3 minutes ago
- New Indian Express
'Economic blackmail': Rahul Gandhi slams Trump's 50 per cent tariff on India
NEW DELHI: Leader of Opposition in Lok Sabha Rahul Gandhi on Wednesday said US President Donald Trump's 50 per cent tariff on Indian goods is "economic blackmail" to bully India into an unfair trade deal. Soon after Trump announced a penalty of another 25 per cent on India for buying Russian oil, the former Congress president said Prime Minister Narendra Modi should not let Indian interests be overridden. "Trump's 50% tariff is economic blackmail - an attempt to bully India into an unfair trade deal. "PM Modi better not let his weakness override the interests of the Indian people," Gandhi said in a post on X.


India Today
10 minutes ago
- India Today
Revanth Reddy takes backward classes quota battle to Delhi, Vijay Deverakonda questioned by ED
This episode of Super 6 covers the Telangana government's push for a 42% reservation for backward classes, led by Chief Minister Revanth Reddy, who protested at Delhi's Jantar Mantar to demand presidential approval for bills passed by the state assembly in March 2025. The proposed legislation aims to increase the reservation quota to 67%, surpassing the Supreme Court's 50% cap, and faces opposition from the BJP over the inclusion of a Muslim quota and criticism from the BRS regarding the protest strategy. A controversy erupted after the Chief Minister warned that opposing Rahul Gandhi's stance would lead to political consequences in Telangana. Additionally, the bulletin highlights an investigation in Dharamsthala, Karnataka, where poisonous substances were found in skeletal remains from two sites, actor Vijay Deverakonda's questioning by the ED in online betting app case and much more.


Time of India
22 minutes ago
- Time of India
Rahul Gandhi brings Adani angle in tariff war
New Delhi: Congress leader Rahul Gandhi on Wednesday said Prime Minister Narendra Modi cannot stand up to US President Donald Trump because of "the ongoing US investigation into Adani". Trump had on Tuesday said that he will raise tariffs on New Delhi "very substantially" over the next 24 hours because India is still buying Russian oil despite his warning against it. "India, please understand: The reason PM Modi cannot stand up to President Trump despite his repeated threats is the ongoing US investigation into Adani. One threat is to expose the financial links between Modi, AA and Russian oil deals. Modi's hands are tied," Gandhi posted on social media. Productivity Tool Zero to Hero in Microsoft Excel: Complete Excel guide By Metla Sudha Sekhar View Program Finance Introduction to Technical Analysis & Candlestick Theory By Dinesh Nagpal View Program Finance Financial Literacy i e Lets Crack the Billionaire Code By CA Rahul Gupta View Program Digital Marketing Digital Marketing Masterclass by Neil Patel By Neil Patel View Program Finance Technical Analysis Demystified- A Complete Guide to Trading By Kunal Patel View Program Productivity Tool Excel Essentials to Expert: Your Complete Guide By Study at home View Program Artificial Intelligence AI For Business Professionals Batch 2 By Ansh Mehra View Program While Gandhi wanted to make India understand his line of argument, it also left some sections of even Congress a bit confused given the contradiction in Trump threatening to impose more tariffs after India refused to give into his demands, including the push to make New Delhi end fuel purchase from Russia and Gandhi's suggestion of the PM not standing up to the US president's trade-deal demands. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like The Simple Morning Habit for a Flatter Belly After 50! Lulutox Undo