In Sangli district’s dusty town of Walwa, a single sugar factory controls more than sweetness — it controls who gets elected to the state assembly, who gets a bank loan, and whose son gets a government job. I have spent years tracking India’s cooperative movement, and nowhere is the entanglement between cooperative economics and raw political power more visible than in Maharashtra’s western sugar belt.
This is not a story about agriculture alone. This is the story of how a network of roughly 200 cooperative sugar factories across Maharashtra became the most effective political machine in Indian democracy — one that has produced at least seven chief ministers, dozens of cabinet ministers, and an entire class of rural oligarchs who straddle the worlds of farming, industry, and governance simultaneously.