HomeNewsIndiaBJP reworks alliance strategy in Tamil Nadu, drops a big hint
Trending Topics

BJP reworks alliance strategy in Tamil Nadu, drops a big hint

After setback in the Lok Sabha polls, BJP is wary of a polarisation that would limit the election to a contest between the ruling DMK and the main opposition, the AIADMK.

December 21, 2024 / 20:15 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
File: Prime Minister Narendra Modi with Tamil Nadu BJP President K Annamalai
File: Prime Minister Narendra Modi with Tamil Nadu BJP President K Annamalai

In the changed political scenario in Tamil Nadu, with actor Vijay launching his own party - Tamilaga Vettri Kazhagam (TVK) - and looking to stitch together an opposition alliance, the BJP seems to be reworking its electoral strategy in Tamil Nadu. After its setback in the Lok Sabha polls, when it drew a blank at the head of a political front without the two Dravidian majors, the BJP is wary of a polarisation that would limit the election to a contest between the ruling DMK and the main opposition, the AIADMK.

The BJP’s State president K Annamalai, the prime cause for alienating AIADMK from the BJP for the Lok Sabha polls, was conscious that there would be little room for a third front if Vijay ties up with the AIADMK, and pulls in some of the smaller parties such as the VCK, a party of Dalits with pockets of influence in northern Tamil Nadu.

Story continues below Advertisement

There is a growing clamour among the VCK cadres for a share in power, or ministerial berths, which its current alliance partner, the DMK, is unwilling to concede. Aadhav Arjuna, who was in the VCK until recently and was a critic of the DMK, is close to Vijay. VCK leader Thol Thirumavallavan himself had spoken of power sharing. The AIADMK, unlike the DMK, is not averse to accommodating other parties in the government, thus making it an attractive option for the smaller parties.

A confusion brewed during a book (on Ambedkar) release function where Thirumavallavan was to share stage with Vijay. But, apparently, pressure from the senior ally DMK and a controversy that arose terming it as sharing the stage with the “enemy”, Thirumavallavan refrained from attending the function. But his irritation with ‘media reports’ was reflected in his statement later, questioning why no one raised doubt when Chief Minister MK Stalin shared the dais with Union Defence Minister Rajnath Singh but there was a hue and cry about him sharing space with Vijay. The book, released on December 6, contained an interview of Thirumavallavan.