A life in organisational work, now in the legislature.
Shri Vilas Tare’s journey from grassroots Shiv Sena worker to the Member of Legislative Assembly for 129-Boisar is the story of a constituency that chose someone who listened first and campaigned second.
Rooted in Boisar. Trusted across Palghar.
Shri Vilas Tare belongs to Palghar — a district where tribal, rural, and industrial India coexist in a single geography. This duality is the defining context of his public life: a politics that understands the Aadivasi household, the MIDC worker, the farming family, and the municipal resident as one interconnected constituency.
Before the legislature, Shri Tare spent over two decades in Shiv Sena’s organisational ecosystem — working at the shakha level, taking up local issues, and building the trust of constituents long before it was tested at the ballot. That body of work is why the mandate came not as a surprise, but as a continuation.
Milestones in a long arc of public work.
The timeline below traces organisational stages, electoral milestones, and institutional responsibilities that define Shri Tare’s public record.
Grassroots entry into Shiv Sena
Joined the Shiv Sena organisation in Boisar at the shakha level — taking up local civic issues, ration-card assistance, and assistance to Aadivasi families navigating government schemes.
District-level responsibility
Entrusted with coordination roles across Palghar — leading booth-level mobilisation, community outreach, and building the party’s tribal-belt network.
Recognised community voice
Became a familiar face on issues of MIDC worker rights, tribal land records, rural water supply, and the educational needs of first-generation students.
Elected MLA, 129-Boisar
Elected to the Maharashtra Legislative Assembly from the 129-Boisar seat on a Shiv Sena ticket — the culmination of years of on-ground organisational trust.
Boisar’s voice in Vidhan Bhavan
Active participation in sessions, questions raised on tribal welfare, MIDC worker issues, rural infrastructure, and public health across Palghar.
Constituency-first governance
Running an accessible MLA office — institutional coordination with the district collectorate, ZP, MIDC, and gram panchayats on continuously updated project files.
Four principles the office holds itself to.
These are not slogans — they are the operating standards that decide how the office prioritises cases, schedules field visits, and responds to citizen correspondence.
Presence before publicity
Field visits precede press releases. If the office claims something, it has been seen on the ground first.
Access without filter
Every citizen of Boisar has the right to a hearing. No intermediary is required to speak with this office.
Inclusion by design
Tribal, industrial, rural, and urban wards must see themselves in every major decision taken from this office.
Institutional follow-through
Announcements are tracked to completion through formal departmental coordination, not left at the inaugural stage.
I did not come to the legislature to represent an abstraction. I came to represent the roads of my village, the schools of my taluka, and the dignity of every Aadivasi family in Palghar.— Vilas Tare
Read the public service record.
Explore legislative participation, civic initiatives, and governance contributions under the current tenure.