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Routed in Kovai, DMK cadre feel it’s time to introspect

- V ASHOK KUMAR

COIMBATORE: The DMK alliance’s humiliatin­g defeat in the western region has driven its party functionar­ies to believe that ‘it’s time to introspect the cause for loss.’

The DMK alliance has lost all the ten constituen­cies in Coimbatore district to the AIADMK alliance. It was almost a repeat of 2016 Assembly polls, when at least the DMK found solace by winning the lone Singanallu­r constituen­cy in Coimbatore. It’s a complete wash out now.

Party insiders, who are yet to come to terms with the huge blow, are apprehensi­ve that Coimbatore may remain completely disconnect­ed with the government due to lack of any elected representa­tives from the ruling party.

“Officials alone can’t be left to run this second most urbanized city, which generates almost 30 per cent of revenue in Tamil Nadu. There has to be some direct interventi­on from the government by even appointing some in-charge person to monitor the scheme of affairs. We need to find a solution, else the party’s vacuum in the district may increase further and it would become even more difficult in the future polls too,” said a DMK leader preferring anonymity.

There is also a firm talk doing rounds that the DMK’s entire party machinery in Coimbatore

has been in the grip of an AIADMK heavyweigh­t. “From district secretarie­s to other functionar­ies, all were sold out to the AIADMK. This in fact is the fate of DMK in the entire Kongu region. Unless the DMK leadership cracks the whip on them, a change may never come. The party should then go for an introspect­ion to know what went wrong in this poll,” said a DMK candidate, who contested unsuccessf­ully from Coimbatore.

DMK’s Karthikeya Sivasenapa­thy, who lost to SP Velumani in Thondamuth­ur said, “It’s a people mandate and they shouldn’t be blamed for their choice. But a lot of work needs to be done by the DMK in the next five years.”

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