Scindia was initiated into electoral politics in 1957 when she contested and won the
Guna Lok Sabha seat in Madhya Pradesh on a
Congress ticket. Five years later, she won on a Congress ticket from Gwalior. Later, she quit the Congress and won the Guna seat in 1967 on
Swatantra Party's ticket. She soon joined
Bharatiya Jan Sangh and resigned from Lok Sabha to take part in state politics. She won the
Karera assembly seat in Madhya Pradesh as the Jan Sangh candidate in 1967 and actively engaged in state politics. Jan Sangh defied the Indira-wave in the 1971 Lok Sabha polls to win 3 seats in Gwalior region – Scindia from
Bhind, Vajpayee from
Gwalior and Madhavrao Scindia from
Guna, though he later left the party. Scindia did not contest Lok Sabha elections in 1977 and 1984 and lost to Indira Gandhi in Rae Bareli in 1980. In 1989, she won from Guna as member of Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), and retained the seat in 1991, 1996 and 1998. She did not contest the elections in 1999 due to old age. She was jailed by
Indira Gandhi during the
Emergency, ultimately sharing a cell with fellow
Rajmata and
MP,
Gayatri Devi, in
Tihar Jail. In the 1970s, Scindia and her son Madhavrao were involved in a public dispute over property. Animosities heightened due to their differing political ideologies. She supported the practice of
Sati, stating, "self-immolation by a widow in dedication of her husband does not constitute an offence." Scindia came to the forefront of the BJP leadership in 1980 when she was made one of its vice-presidents. She played a key role in popularising the party's
Ram Rath Yatra and was considered a hardliner. Following the
demolition of the Babri Masjid in December 1992, she had declared that "she could now die without any regret, for she had seen her dream come true." She remained a BJP vice-president until 1998 when she stepped down on health grounds and quit electoral politics. She died in January 2001. ==Ancestry==