Overview
This draft has been prepared as an internal scaffolding document for IndiaWiki editors working on a prospective biographical article titled "Satish Yadav", with the subject understood to belong to the politician cohort. It is expressly not intended for public publication in its present form. The purpose of this document is to give reviewing editors a structured starting point, outline the kinds of information that would typically be expected in a biographical entry on a political figure, and flag the categories of facts that must be independently verified before any version of the article goes live.
Because "Satish Yadav" is a relatively common Indian name, editors should first confirm precisely which individual the article is intended to cover. There may be multiple persons of public note sharing this name, including state-level legislators, local body office bearers, party functionaries, and aspirants who have contested elections without holding office. Establishing identity unambiguously, by reference to constituency, party affiliation, period of activity, and other distinguishing markers, is a prerequisite to any further drafting. Until that disambiguation is complete, editors should treat all biographical specifics as unverified and should refrain from importing material from other drafts, social media profiles, or campaign literature without corroboration from independent, reliable sources.
Background
For a politician's biographical entry, the background section conventionally covers early life, education, family context where it is genuinely relevant and on the public record, and the route by which the subject entered public life. In the present case, none of these particulars can be stated here, because the title and cohort alone do not provide a sourced basis for any specific claims. Editors should therefore approach this section as an empty frame to be populated only with details that can be attributed to reliable, independent reporting or to official records such as Election Commission of India affidavits, legislative assembly or parliamentary handbooks, or recognised reference works.
It would be appropriate, once identity is settled, to outline the broader political and regional context in which the subject operates. This may include the state or region of activity, the party or parties with which the subject has been associated, and the general character of the constituency or organisational role concerned. Editors are reminded to avoid speculative biographical colour, such as anecdotes about childhood, motivations, or personal beliefs, unless these have been published in credible secondary sources. Self-published material and partisan websites should be used with caution and never as the sole basis for substantive claims.
Significance
The significance section of a politician's article should explain, in neutral terms, why the subject merits an encyclopaedic entry. For Indian political figures, notability is typically established through election to a legislative body, holding of a recognised public office, sustained leadership of a registered political party, or sustained and substantial coverage in independent reliable sources over time. Editors working on this draft should be careful not to assert significance that has not been demonstrated through such sources.
If the subject's notability rests primarily on a single event, such as a contested election, the article should reflect that proportionately rather than presenting the subject as a figure of broader influence. Where the subject's role is largely organisational within a party, editors should describe that role factually and avoid language that implies a wider public profile than the sources support. The tone throughout should be measured. Promotional phrasing, honorifics, and evaluative adjectives should be avoided in favour of plain descriptive prose grounded in citations.
Common topics for editors to verify
The following checklist sets out categories of information that editors will typically need to confirm against reliable sources before including them in any published version of the article. Each item should be treated as a prompt for verification rather than as an indication that the corresponding fact exists or is established.
- Full legal name, any commonly used alternative spellings, and the correct rendering in relevant Indian scripts.
- Date and place of birth, where these have been disclosed in official records or credible reporting.
- Educational qualifications, with attention to whether claims appear in self-declared affidavits and whether they have been independently reported.
- Party affiliation or affiliations over time, including any changes, and the dates of such changes.
- Elections contested, with constituency, year, party symbol, result, and margin, drawn from Election Commission records.
- Public offices held, with exact titles, the bodies concerned, and the start and end dates of each tenure.
- Ministerial or organisational portfolios, committee memberships, and any official responsibilities.
- Notable legislative initiatives, public statements, or policy positions documented in reliable sources.
- Any legal proceedings, disciplinary actions, or controversies; these require especially rigorous sourcing in line with the biographies of living persons standard.
- Family members, only where they are themselves public figures or where the relationship is materially relevant and reliably reported.
- Awards, honours, or recognitions, with the awarding body and year.
Editors should also verify that any image used is appropriately licensed and genuinely depicts the correct individual, given the disambiguation concerns flagged above. Numerical claims, such as vote shares or terms served, should be reproduced exactly as they appear in the cited source, with the source date noted.
Suggested structure for the final article
Once the necessary verification has been completed, editors may consider organising the final article along the following conventional lines, adapting the structure to the volume and nature of reliable material actually available:
- Lead section: a concise summary identifying the subject, principal political affiliation, and the basis of notability, written so that it can stand alone.
- Early life and education: background details supported by reliable sources.
- Political career: chronological account of party roles, candidacies, and offices, with subsections by phase or office where the material warrants.
- Positions and public conduct: documented policy stances, legislative activity, or notable public interventions.
- Personal life: only such information as is on the public record and genuinely relevant.
- See also: links to related constituencies, parties, and contemporaries.
- References: full citations to all sources used.
- External links: official party or government pages, where appropriate.
Sections should be omitted entirely where reliable material is unavailable, rather than padded with speculative content. The article should not include campaign-style language, and infobox fields must be populated only from cited sources.
Editorial notes
Reviewers are asked to bear in mind that this draft deliberately contains no specific biographical assertions, because none can responsibly be made from the title and cohort alone. Any future revision must comply with the IndiaWiki standards on biographies of living persons, including strict sourcing for all potentially contentious material, neutral point of view, and avoidance of original research. Particular caution is warranted with respect to allegations, criminal cases, financial matters, and family details, all of which require multiple high-quality independent sources before inclusion.
If, after due diligence, editors find that reliable independent coverage of the intended subject is limited, consideration should be given to whether a stand-alone article is justified at this time, or whether the subject is better covered briefly within a related article, such as one on the relevant constituency, election, or party unit. A short, well-sourced entry is always preferable to a longer entry that relies on weak sourcing. Editors who substantially expand this draft should record their sources in the references section as they go, rather than retrospectively.
References
No references are cited in this scaffolding document, as it contains no verified factual claims about the subject. Editors developing the article further should add full citations here, drawing on Election Commission of India records, official legislative or governmental publications, and reporting from established Indian news organisations with editorial oversight. Each substantive statement in the final article should be supported by an inline citation to a reliable, independent source.