Overview
This draft has been prepared as a preliminary, editor-facing scaffold for an IndiaWiki article on the subject titled Mahendra Manjhi, who is identified within the broad cohort of politicians. The draft does not assert biographical particulars such as dates of birth, constituencies, party affiliations, electoral results, terms of office, or personal relationships, because none of these can be confirmed from the title and cohort alone. Instead, the document is structured to help reviewing editors collect, verify and integrate reliable sources before any version of this article is considered for public visibility.
Editors should treat every line below as provisional. Where conventional Wikipedia-style biographies would normally include concrete details, this draft uses neutral framing and explicit placeholders. The aim is to provide enough scaffolding that, once verified information is added, the article can be quickly shaped into a balanced, well-sourced biography that complies with IndiaWiki's neutrality, verifiability and biographies-of-living-persons norms. Until such verification is performed, this draft must not be moved to the main namespace, copied to mirrors, or quoted in summaries. The Overview is intentionally generic so that any future expansion is driven by sources rather than by assumptions arising from the name or cohort label. Editors should also flag any potential confusion with other public figures sharing the same or similar names.
Background
The name Manjhi appears in several regions of India and is associated with multiple linguistic, social and occupational backgrounds. Without sourced information, this draft does not attribute the subject to any particular state, community, language group, or political tradition. Editors preparing the final version are encouraged to begin by establishing the subject's region of activity, the period in which the subject has been politically active, and the level of government — local body, state legislature, parliament, or party organisation — at which the subject's work has primarily taken place.
Because there are several public figures across India who use the surname Manjhi, including individuals who have held political and administrative responsibilities at different levels, special care is required to disambiguate. The reviewing editor should not assume that this subject is connected to any particular family, party lineage, or earlier office holder simply on the basis of shared surnames. A short, neutral background paragraph in the eventual article should establish only those biographical facts — place of origin, education, early career — that are directly attested by reliable, independent secondary sources. Anything else should be left out until corroborated. Where sources disagree, the article should attribute claims to specific publications rather than presenting them as undisputed facts.
Significance
Without verified sourcing, the significance of the subject cannot be precisely characterised. In general terms, an article about a politician on IndiaWiki is justified when the subject has held an office that confers presumed notability, has been the focus of substantial coverage in independent reliable sources, or has played a documented role in policy, legislation, party organisation, or public movements. Editors should determine which, if any, of these criteria apply to Mahendra Manjhi before expanding the article.
If notability is established, the Significance section in the final article may discuss the subject's contributions in a measured tone, avoiding promotional language and steering clear of campaign rhetoric. Editors should also be alert to the risk of undue weight: a single news cycle, a contested election outcome, or a controversial statement should not be allowed to dominate the article unless reliable sources treat it as central to the subject's public identity. Conversely, sustained coverage of legislative work, constituency development, or organisational leadership, where present, deserves proportionate space. The objective is to convey why a general reader of an Indian encyclopaedia might benefit from learning about this individual, expressed entirely through what independent sources have already established.
Common topics for editors to verify
The following checklist enumerates the categories of fact that editors should confirm against reliable, independent, preferably secondary sources before inserting them into the article. Each item should be supported by at least one citation, and ideally by two where the claim is contentious or affects living persons.
- Full legal name, alternate spellings, and any commonly used short forms or honorifics.
- Date and place of birth, and, if applicable and sourced, date and place of death.
- Family background, including parents and spouse, only where reported in reliable sources and where privacy considerations permit inclusion.
- Educational qualifications, listing institutions and fields of study with citations.
- Early occupational or activist background prior to entering electoral or organisational politics.
- Political party affiliation, with dates of joining, leaving, or switching parties, and the sources documenting each transition.
- Constituencies contested, with dates, results, and the names of principal opponents, all from official or reputable secondary sources.
- Offices held, including ministerial portfolios, committee memberships, or party positions, with corresponding terms.
- Notable legislative initiatives, policy positions, or campaigns associated with the subject.
- Public controversies, legal proceedings, or disciplinary actions, handled with strict adherence to BLP norms and attributed to specific reliable reports.
- Honours, awards, or formal recognitions, listed only when independently verifiable.
- Affiliations with social, cultural, or community organisations, where documented.
Editors are reminded that official websites, election commission records, gazette notifications and parliamentary or assembly archives are typically more reliable for offices and dates than partisan media. For matters of opinion, ideology, or impact, multiple independent secondary sources should be consulted, and contested characterisations should be attributed in-text. Numbers — vote shares, margins, terms — must be quoted exactly as they appear in primary records, with the source cited.
Suggested structure for the final article
Once verification is complete, editors may consider the following structure as a starting template, adjusting sections according to the depth of available sourcing:
- Lead paragraph: A concise summary establishing identity, cohort, principal role, and reason for notability, written in neutral tone.
- Early life and education: Birth, family background where appropriate, and schooling or higher education.
- Early career: Pre-political work, social engagement, or activism that shaped the subject's later trajectory.
- Political career: Chronological treatment of party affiliations, candidatures, electoral outcomes and offices held. Sub-headings by phase or by office may help readability.
- Policy positions and public statements: Sourced summaries of stances on key issues, expressed with attribution.
- Controversies, if any: Carefully written, balanced, and strictly sourced, in line with BLP norms.
- Personal life: Limited to what is publicly disclosed and relevant.
- Legacy or current activities: Depending on whether the subject is active or retired.
- See also, References, External links.
The structure should remain proportionate to available sourcing: a section without reliable citations is better omitted than padded.
Editorial notes
Reviewers should approach this draft as a neutral starting point rather than a near-final article. Several precautions are recommended. First, perform a disambiguation check across IndiaWiki, news archives and electoral databases to ensure that references to Mahendra Manjhi consistently denote the same individual; if multiple persons share the name, a hatnote or disambiguation page may be required. Second, prefer secondary sources from established news organisations, academic publications, and official records over social media posts, partisan blogs, or campaign material. Third, treat all contentious claims, particularly those touching on character, criminal allegations, or disputed elections, as subject to the strictest BLP standards: omit until thoroughly sourced, and attribute when included.
Fourth, maintain a neutral register throughout, avoiding honorific prefixes, hagiographic adjectives and politically loaded vocabulary. Fifth, document every editing decision in the talk page, especially decisions to exclude particular claims or sources, so that subsequent editors understand the reasoning. Finally, before any move to the public namespace, ensure that the lead paragraph accurately reflects the body, that the references list is complete and formatted consistently, and that no unsourced specifics remain from this scaffold.
References
No references have been added in this draft because no specific factual claims have been made about the subject. Editors expanding this article should cite reliable, independent, and preferably secondary sources for every substantive statement. Suggested categories of source to consult include: Election Commission of India records and state election commission archives; official gazettes and assembly or parliamentary proceedings; reports from established Indian newspapers and broadcasters with editorial oversight; peer-reviewed academic studies on relevant constituencies, parties, or movements; and official party communications, used cautiously and with attribution. Each citation should include author where available, title, publisher, date, and a stable link or archival reference.