Visits by bigwigs including Prime Minister Narendra Modi to NCP chief Sharad Pawar's home turf Baramati also made news.
The Devendra Fadnavis-led government, which completed a year in office on October 31, has been beset with internal squabbles with the Sena, which joined the ministry in December last year.
The rift within the ruling alliance was on public display ahead of the Kalyan Dombivali Municipal Corporation elections. Sena president Uddhav Thackeray then threatened to withdraw support to the government if the BJP does not shed its "arrogance".
Putting behind the rancour of the bitterly-fought election, Sena and BJP later decided to share power in the civic body following a hung verdict.
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In October, amid the widening rift between the ruling allies, the Shiv Sena stayed away from Modi's functions in Mumbai including the 'bhoomipujan' for the international memorial for Babasaheb Ambedkar and the ground-breaking for two Metro railway lines.
Thackeray, cold-shouldered by the BJP for the functions - his name was missing from the initial official list of dignitaries attending the event - chose to visit Beed in drought-affected Marathwada, where the party disbursed aid to distressed farmers.
While Modi had attacked Pawar during Maharashtra elections last year and called the NCP the "Naturally Corrupt Party," the February visit sparked off a new bonhomie where the prime minister sang a different tune.
Calling Pawar an experienced leader, he said, "I speak to Sharad Pawar more than two times a month. Sharad Pawar has always thought of farmers plight."
Jaitley, who attended a series of functions at Baramati and Pune, even stayed overnight at Pawar's Govind Baug residence near Baramati.
apparently delayed the expansion of the state cabinet, with the tussle between BJP-Shiv Sena combine mainly stemming from the Sena's demand for cabinet berths.
When Sena joined the government, the strength of the Fadnavis ministry increased from 10 to 30. At present, there are 20 ministers from BJP and 10 from Sena.
The acrimony between Sena and BJP continued as the Winter Session of the state legislature began at Nagpur on December 7, when the Sena staged vociferous protests against Advocate General Shrihari Aney over his remarks on the issue of separate statehood to Vidarbha, and sought his suspension.
Two statements made by Aney drew the ire of supporters of the 'United Maharashtra' movement. The first was that the central government should hold a referendum on Vidarbha and if 51 per cent or more people support it then statehood should be granted. The second was that 105 people who had been martyred in January 1960 had not died for keeping Vidarbha in Maharashtra but only to keep Mumbai in the state.
Women and Child Welfare Minister Pankaja Munde was in June accused of involvement in a scam related to the award of contracts worth Rs 206 crore for purchasing items for state-run schools.
The Opposition also accused Tawde of having a fake engineering degree. Raising the issues in state legislature, Opposition demanded the resignation of Pankaja and Tawde.
Congress in June alleged that Water Supply Minister Babanrao Lonikar has two wives, but in his affidavit before the Election Commission has submitted the name of only one.
Minister of State for Home Ranjit Patil also faced allegations by the Opposition that he had under-reported property details in an election affidavit.
It was a disappointing year for former chief minister and
senior Congress leader Narayan Rane, who lost the Assembly poll last year from Kankavali constituency in Sindhudurg district to Sena's Vaibhav Naik. Rane contested the Bandra Assembly bypoll in April but even his comeback attempt failed.
As the year drew to a close, his hopes of getting a back-door entry in the legislature were dashed as he was not given Congress ticket for the Legislative Council elections, scheduled to be held later this month.
Rationalist Govind Pansare was killed in February. Seven months later, police nabbed a full-time volunteer of the right wing organisation Sanatan Sanstha in the murder case.
Congress and NCP, which shared power for 15 years since 1999, have not been effective in putting the government on the mat during legislature sessions.
Congress got a new chief of the state unit in March, when former chief minister Ashok Chavan, who was in spotlight due to his alleged involvement in the Adarsh scam, was appointed as MPCC president.
Senior NCP leader R R Patil, former deputy chief minister, passed away in February at 57 while being treated for cancer. Patil, six-term MLA from Tasgaon in Sangli district, was among the longest-serving home ministers of Maharashtra and was also one of the most powerful ministers in the Congress-led coalition that ruled the state till last year.
He was also the man behind the controversial decision to ban dance bars in Mumbai and other parts of Maharashtra. A decade after Patil shut down dance bars, his daughter Smita has decided to carry forward the mission of her late father, after the Supreme Court last month ordered the Maharashtra government to start issuing licences for re-opening of dance bars within two weeks.
In September, senior BJP leader Ram Kapse passed away at 82. He was a former Lt. Governor of Andaman and Nicobar Islands and represented Thane in the 9th and 10th Lok Sabha.
Former Bihar and Kerala Governor and senior Republican Party of India (RPI) leader R S Gavai, 86, passed away in July.