Business Standard

In TN, BJP hopes to blunt criticism, break ‘2-party’ poll system

- RAGHAV AGGARWAL

For nearly five decades now, Tamil Nadu (TN) politics has been a contest between the two Dravidian parties, the DMK and AIADMK. The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) hopes to disrupt this with its multi-party rainbow coalition for the 2024 Lok Sabha polls.

If the BJP has set out to transition Tamil Nadu from a bipolar to a triangular contest, the Naam Tamizhar Katchi — a nascent Tamil nationalis­t outfit with a growing following among the youth in the state’s southern part — has ambitions to make it into a fourcorner­ed battle in the state’s 39 seats, which will vote on Friday. The MK Stalin-led Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK), along with its allies, such as the Left parties and the Congress, has set the target of bettering its 2019 performanc­e by winning all 39 seats, including the lone Puducherry constituen­cy. In 2019, the alliance won 38 of Tamil Nadu’s 39 seats, with the AIADMK winning one. The Dmk-led alliance also won Puducherry. The BJP was a constituen­t of the AIADMK-LED alliance five years back, as also in the 2021 TN Assembly polls.

According to political commentato­r Amitabh Tiwari, the BJP is aiming to take the number two spot in the state from the AIADMK and "subsume" its votes. Earlier, BJP'S strategy allowed the regional parties in the state to accuse it of being anti-tamil. But this time, the party has changed tack to blunt the critique that it was a “Hindi and Hindutva” party.

Over the last couple of years, the BJP has organised Tamil Sangamams in Varanasi and Gujarat, and the PM has visited the state seven times since February, and did so in the run up to the inaugurati­on of the Ram temple in Ayodhya in January. The BJP manifesto, released on Sunday, spoke of setting up Thiruvallu­var centres across the world and work to enhance the global reputation of Tamil.

Tiwari said that the BJP is trying to fill the leadership vacuum, which it believes exists in Tamil politics after the deaths of former chief ministers, MK Karunanidh­i and J Jayalalith­aa, with Modi at the Centre and 39-yearold Ips-turned-politician K Annamalai as its leader in the state. The BJP’S social engineerin­g in TN has centred on shaping a coalition of parties with influence among various communitie­s, such as the Pattali Makkal Katchi, while AIADMK rebels T T V Dhinakaran and O Panneersel­vam are also part of the alliance. BJP’S state unit chief and its Coimabator­e candidate Annamalai hails from the OBC Gounder caste.

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