The Kannada movement, Patil says, has also played a key role given the history of the unification of a state whose territories lay scattered in erstwhile presidencies and princely states in 1947. “Had there been no issues concerning the cause of Kannada, these different parts of Kannada Nadu would rather be away from each other, distrusting each other. The Kannada cause is a cementing factor,” says Patil. For that matter, the chief minister’s connection to language pride also travels back decades. The 1980s Kannada agitation, centred around the Gokak report, was many things at once—a linguistic and cultural assertion and a farmers’ agitation. The action that began in Dharwad in northern Karnataka became widespread once actor Rajkumar stepped in. In 1983, when the Janata party came to power, Siddaramaiah became the first chairman of the Kannada Bhasha Kavalu Samiti, a watchdog for Kannada which later became the Kannada Development Author-ity. Therefore, he has, as political analyst Narendar Pani puts it, “a kind of say with Kannada organisations that other CMs didn’t”.