HomeNewsIndia'Pleasing allies': Southern discomfort over neglect in Modi 3.0 Budget proposals

'Pleasing allies': Southern discomfort over neglect in Modi 3.0 Budget proposals

Far from satisfying the South, the Budget might have worsened the ties of the opposition-ruled states with the Centre.

July 24, 2024 / 20:19 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
(L-R) Kerala CM Pinarayi Vijayan, Tamil Nadu CM MK Stalin and Telangana CM Revanth Reddy have criticised the Union Budget. (Courtesy: PTI)
(L-R) Kerala CM Pinarayi Vijayan, Tamil Nadu CM MK Stalin and Telangana CM Revanth Reddy have criticised the Union Budget. (Courtesy: PTI)

The Union Budget is fuelling political opposition in several of the southern states as the perception that economic largesse is being distributed to other states for political reasons is growing. Except for Andhra Pradesh - its ruling party, the Telugu Desam Party (TDP), being an ally in the Union NDA government - all other southern state heads have termed the Union budget as catering to vote-bank politics.

The BJP might have only wanted to please its allies, the TDP in Andhra Pradesh and the JD(U) in Bihar, but the fact that other states in the South are being ruled by parties opposed to the BJP is giving the whole controversy a worrying north-south dimension.

Story continues below Advertisement

Indeed, Telangana Chief Minister A Revanth Reddy is talking of bringing together other chief ministers in the South to take on the Centre over the Union Budget allocations, delimitation of Parliamentary Constituencies, central funds, Centre-state relationship, what states are getting back from GST etc.

In protest, Tamil Nadu Chief Minister MK Stalin was the first to announce the boycott of the upcoming NITI Aayog Governing Council meeting convened by Prime Minister Narendra Modi on July 27. "I will boycott it. It will only be appropriate to boycott a Union government’s meeting as Tamil Nadu was boycotted (in the Union Budget)," Stalin said addressing the media on Tuesday. He also remarked, to a question, that as there was no mention of Tamil Nadu or Tamil in the Union budget and he presumed that 'they' are angry with the people of the state, post Lok Sabha election results.