Role in Congress politics Dwarka Prasad Mishra emerged as an influential leader of the
Indian National Congress in the Central Provinces and later in Madhya Pradesh following the reorganisation of states in 1956. He was active in national-level party deliberations during the Nehru era and maintained working relationships with senior leaders including
Jawaharlal Nehru,
Indira Gandhi, and
Morarji Desai. Political commentaries frequently describe Mishra as a strategist within the Congress organization during the turbulent period following the 1967 general elections, when Congress dominance weakened in several states. Following the 1967 elections, Mishra, along with
Chandra Bhanu Gupta, was involved in intra-party negotiations that led to a power-sharing understanding between Indira Gandhi and Morarji Desai, under which Desai assumed the office of Deputy Prime Minister. The arrangement subsequently collapsed and contributed to the 1969 split in the Congress party. Mishra’s political memoirs later revealed correspondence attributed to
Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel concerning internal Congress matters in 1946. The publication of this material generated public and political debate, with some Congress leaders questioning the authenticity and timing of its disclosure. The episode drew renewed attention to Mishra’s proximity to senior Congress leadership during the formative years of independent India. Some political narratives and retrospective accounts have suggested that Mishra maintained channels of dialogue across ideological lines during the early decades of independence, including engagement with leaders associated with the
Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh. However, his primary political affiliation throughout his career remained with the Congress party. == Chief Minister of Madhya Pradesh ==