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This draft is an internal scaffolding document prepared for IndiaWiki editors who intend to develop a full-length article on a subject titled Vishwaas Nangre, listed under the cohort of politicians. It is intended strictly as a starting point for human review, fact-checking and rewriting, and not for public publication in its present form. The draft deliberately refrains from asserting biographical particulars such as date of birth, native place, family background, party affiliation, electoral record, offices held, or any honours, because none of these can be confirmed from the title and cohort alone. Editors are requested to treat every section below as a placeholder framework that must be populated only after consulting reliable, independently verifiable sources. Where the cohort label suggests a public political role, editors should still verify whether the individual is best described as an elected representative, a party functionary, a local-level politician, an aspirant, or a person who has crossed between political and non-political careers. Naming variations, transliteration differences, and possible confusion with similarly named individuals must be checked carefully before any factual claim is added. The aim of this draft is to support cautious, evidence-based editorial work.
Because the only inputs available are the article title and the cohort designation, this background section cannot responsibly assert specific life details. Editors expanding the article should first establish, through reliable secondary sources, the basic identity of the subject: full legal name and any commonly used spellings or short forms, approximate period of public activity, and the geographic region most strongly associated with the subject's political career. Indian political biographies typically draw on a combination of Election Commission of India affidavits, Lok Sabha or Rajya Sabha member profiles, state legislative assembly records, party websites, mainstream English and regional-language newspapers, and reputable long-form journalism. Each of these sources has its own reliability profile and should be cited carefully. Editors should be alert to the possibility that two or more public figures may share variants of this name, and should not conflate them. Where the subject's political activity is primarily at the municipal, panchayat, or district level, sourcing may be sparser and require additional caution. If the subject's notability cannot be substantiated through multiple independent reliable sources, the article may not meet IndiaWiki's notability thresholds and should be flagged for discussion before further drafting.
The significance of any political figure on IndiaWiki must be established through demonstrable, sourced impact rather than through assumption. For the present subject, editors should weigh significance against criteria such as: holding or having held elected office at a recognised level; sustained leadership of a registered political party or a substantial faction; verifiable influence on policy debates documented in independent reporting; or a documented public role that has attracted continuing media attention over time. The cohort tag of "politician" alone does not establish notability. Editors should resist the temptation to pad the article with general statements about Indian politics that are not specific to the subject. Conversely, where the subject is genuinely significant, the article should explain that significance in concrete, sourced terms, with attention to neutrality and balance. If the subject is associated with contested events, controversies, or ongoing legal matters, those should be addressed only with the most careful sourcing, avoiding both promotional language and unsubstantiated negative claims. The neutrality policy applies with particular force to living political figures, where reputational implications of unverified statements can be considerable.
The following checklist is offered as a guide. Each item should be confirmed against at least two independent reliable sources before inclusion, and items that cannot be reliably sourced should be omitted rather than retained with hedged language.
Editors should also verify image rights before adding any photograph, and should ensure that infobox parameters are filled only with confirmed data.
A polished IndiaWiki article on a politician typically follows a recognisable structure that helps readers navigate the subject's life and work. For this article, the following arrangement is suggested:
The infobox should be populated cautiously, leaving fields blank rather than guessing. Categories should be added only after the corresponding facts are confirmed in the body of the article.
Editors are reminded that this draft contains no verified biographical content and must not be promoted to mainspace in its present form. The cohort label of "politician" is a working classification and may itself need refinement once reliable sources are consulted; the subject may better fit a more specific descriptor such as state-level legislator, party office-bearer, or local government representative. Particular care should be taken with the biographies of living persons policy: contentious material, especially relating to allegations, criminal proceedings, or personal conduct, must be removed immediately if not supported by high-quality sources, and discussion should be initiated on the talk page before reinsertion. Transliteration of the subject's name from Indian-language scripts should be cross-checked, and redirects from alternative spellings should be created where appropriate. If during research it becomes clear that the subject does not meet IndiaWiki's notability guidelines for politicians, the draft should be tagged for review rather than expanded. Finally, editors should keep a transparent edit summary trail and use citation templates consistently, so that subsequent reviewers can audit each factual claim against its source.
No references are listed in this draft, since no verified factual claims have been made. Editors developing the article should add citations to reliable, independent, secondary sources such as established national and regional newspapers, peer-reviewed scholarship, official Election Commission of India records, and recognised political reference works. Each substantive sentence in the final article should be supported by at least one such citation, with sensitive claims supported by multiple sources.