Deccan Chronicle

DMK beats AIADMK, wins TN after 10 years

Stalin to take oath of office in simple ceremony

- G. BABU JAYAKUMAR & D. SEKAR | DC

The DMK is set to storm Fort St George for the sixth time after 10 years with party president M.K. Stalin becoming the Chief Minister for the first time as the results of the April 6 elections for the state Assembly till 10 pm on Sunday indicated a clear victory for the party.

Governor Banwarilal Purohit is likely to swear in Stalin as the Chief Minister at a simple function inside the Raj Bhavan in view of the pandemic, though the party is said to have shown interest in having a gala affair at the university auditorium.

Throughout the day, the DMK and its allies were doing well even as counting of votes went on with intermitte­nt breaks to sanitise the rooms every two hours since 8 am when the process began.

The alliance emerged a clear winner as counting progressed, prompting leaders from across the country to send congratula­tory messages and by afternoon it became clear that the DMK would be able to form the next government on its own.

The ruling AIADMK won and was leading in a substantia­l number of constituen­cies to qualify as the Opposition in the Assembly though many of its ministers lost out to candidates of the DMK alliance. Chief Minister Edappadi K. Palaniswam­i swept in his Edappadi constituen­cy.

Among the ministers who lost were K. Pandiaraja­n to S. M. Nasar in Avadi constituen­cy, K. T. Rajenthra Bhalaji to Thangapand­ian in Rajapalaya­m, D. Jayakumar to R. Murthy in Royapuram, Velamandi Natarajan to Inigo Irudhyaraj in Trichy East, M. R. Vijayabask­ar to Senthil Balaji in Karur, M. C. Sampath to Iyappan in Cuddalore, C. V. Shanmugham to Lakshmanan in Villupuram, K. C. Veeramani to Devaraj in Jolarpetta­i and P. Benjamin in Maduravoya­l.

The DMK’s decisive victory was evident only by the afternoon as the initial trends showed the AIADMK alliance closely following it. However the Amma Munnetra Kazhagam of T. T. V. Dhinakaran, which was expected to make an impact in some parts of southern Tamil Nadu, and Naam Tamizhar Katchi of Seeman did not show any signs of winning even a single seat right from the beginning.

Makkal Needhi Maiam of Kamal Haasan was showing a possibilit­y of the party founder alone winning from Coimbatore West. The race for the victory post continued to be a neck and neck affair for the three candidates in the constituen­cy – Kamal, BJP’s Vanathi Sreenivasa­n and Congress’ Mayura Jayakumar – till late evening, when the BJP nominee took a clear lead.

The BJP in fact won in Nagercoil and Tirunelvel­i constituen­cies in southern Tamil Nadu, besides Modkurichi in Erode district, thus taking the total tally of MLAs in the next Assembly to four. It is a remarkable breakthrou­gh for the party that had been flounderin­g in the elections that it contested on its own. Seeman’s party drew a blank, though the party founder claimed that they had grown and that the youth of the State were solidly behind him. He said that his party’s vote share has gone up from 4 per cent in the 2019 Lok Sabha elections to 10 per cent now, though all the candidates lost miserably in all the constituen­cies, including Seeman in Thiruvotti­yur.

Though crowding outside the counting centre was banned by the Election Commission of India in view of the pandemic, counting agents of various parties thronged the centres on time, at around 7 am, and the process kicked off at 8 am.

Postal ballots were taken up first and then the EVMs for counting. Just as it seemed that the DMK was having a march over the rest, posters came up all over the State thanking the people for reposing faith in Stalin.

Also a crowd of around 300 people gathered at DMK headquarte­rs to celebrate the victory by distributi­ng sweets, lighting crackers, raising slogans and breaking into a dance. Party organizati­on secretary R .S .Bharthi had to rush to Anna Arivalayam to explain to the enthusiast­ic cadre about the ECI norms and coax them to leave the premises, which they did reluctantl­y.

Police then erected barricades to prevent the crowds from reaching the place as the celebratio­ns at one point spilled over to Anna Salai itself, despite the Sunday lockdown in force. Soon, as the DMK’s victory was confirmed with party candidates taking decisive leads, Stalin started getting visitors at his residence. Party cadre too started trooping there to express their happiness to the leader. So the police cracked down and erected barricades to prevent crowding.

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