Deccan Chronicle

DMK’s path clearly laid down by Stalin

29 AUGUST 2018

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The son of the DMK’s longtime patriarch has finally taken over the reins. At the formal investitur­e held within three weeks of M. Karunanidh­i’s demise, M.K. Stalin clearly defined the party’s secular line while reiteratin­g its commitment to fight the BJP in very strong language. At a time when Hindutva is on the rise elsewhere in India, the DMK’s stance against authoritar­ianism and communalis­m is a statement of intent and political positionin­g when it is open season for alliances ahead of 2019. The Dravidian party, that rode to power on the back of a powerful student movement opposing the imposition of Hindi in 1967, may have fallen on lean days electorall­y now as it has been sidelined since its associatio­n with UPA-2 when it came under the 2G cloud. But there’s no reason to doubt whether the party will have a crucial national role to play again in a major state with 40 (including Puducherry) Lok Sabha seats.

Karunanidh­i was considered a shrewd political strategist for being able to align his DMK with both sides of the political spectrum — he was a part of the NDA under Atal Behari Vajpayee and with two UPA government­s led by Dr Manmohan Singh. His son has chosen to pitch is strong rhetoric against the BJP. He has taken the moral high ground in the immediate aftermath of a fresh start as party president, which his father was for 50 years, before whom there were few as the seat was reverentia­lly kept for E.V.R. Periyar, atheist social reformer and founder of the movement from which the DMK was born. Despite his long political experience , Stalin has a hard act to follow in national politics. Another priority for Stalin soon after his ascension will be to tackle head-on a rebellion that his older brother and former UPA minister M.K. Alagiri has been threatenin­g, although he’s not even a member of the DMK. In asserting his rights and even declaring “I have no brother”, the “Thalapathy” (commander) has indeed taken charge. The party’s highest echelons may have more than a sprinkling of family, but the DMK is a cadre-based party with a high voteshare, and a strong leader can leverage such grassroots backing into political capital. Stalin’s DMK will be sailing into uncharted electoral waters in the post-Jayalalith­aa scenario of a fragmented ruling AIADMK, but in which the DMK placed a poor third in a bypoll for Jayalalith­aa’s seat in Chennai against the winner from the T.T.V. Dhinakaran faction and the official AIADMK candidate. In the face of such imponderab­les, the DMK is Stalin’s own ship to steer.

It’s in laying down his thoughts for the path the party will follow in the immediate future that Stalin has shown a clarity and decisivene­ss that he seemed to lack when he was just the ‘rising son’

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