Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Ally, adversary of both pan-India parties

CONG TIES Once a critic of Indira Gandhi, Kalaignar backed her in 1980 but shared a rocky relationsh­ip with the party over the years

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ANIMOSITY BETWEEN THE TWO SIDES PEAKED IN JANUARY 1976 WHEN INDIRA GANDHI, CITING CORRUPTION CHARGES AGAINST KARUNANIDH­I DISMISSED THE DMK, GOVERNMENT

NEW DELHI: Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK) patriarch M Karunanidh­i shared blow hotblow-cold ties with the Congress in the six decades of his career.

When he took over as the chief minister of Tamil Nadu for the first time in 1969, the then Prime Minister Indira Gandhi called him “confrontat­ionist”.

Eleven years later, Karunanidh­i or Kalaignar (a scholar of arts) to his supporters, backed Indira Gandhi in the 1980 general elections after opposing her bitterly during Emergency, which also brought him close to the Janata Party founded by Jayaprakas­h Narayan. The animosity between the two sides peaked in January 1976 when Indira Gandhi, citing corruption charges against Karunanidh­i, dismissed the DMK government.

Kalaignar would often cite his famous phrase of 1980 -- “Nehruvin Magale Varuga, nilayana aatchi tharuga (Welcome daughter of Pandit Nehru, give a stable regime)” -- to emphasise his party’s deep and strong ties with the grand old party.

Karunanidh­i talked about the great regard the DMK had for India’s first PM Jawaharlal Nehru, and the cordial relations he shared with Indira Gandhi, Rajiv Gandhi and their family members despite difference­s.

He showered praises on Rajiv Gandhi for his efforts to bring back democracy at the grassroots. Kalaignar kept personal relationsh­ips away from politics.

The five-time chief minister would often proudly claim that he had even organised a black flag demonstrat­ion against Nehru.

During his political career, Kalaignar played a key role in stitching alliances in Tamil Nadu and also at the national level. He was instrument­al in the formation of the National Front, a rainbow coalition led by the Janata Dal, in 1989. But the Karunanidh­i government was dismissed again in January 1991 – this time by the Chandrasek­har government on the ground of breakdown of constituti­onal machinery and accusing the DMK leader of not doing enough to crack down on the Tamil Tigers in his state.

The DMK was also a part of the United Front government from 1996 to 1998. The Jain commission report on Rajiv Gandhi’s assassinat­ion had concluded that the DMK was giving “tacit support” to the LTTE whose militants had killed the former Prime Minister.

However, the IK Gujral-led United Front government fell in November 1997 after the Congress withdrew its support after its demand for removal of the DMK ministers was rejected.

This pushed Karunanidh­i towards the BJP-led National Democratic Alliance (NDA) in 1999 and his party joined the Atal Bihari Vajpayee government till December 2003 when it quit the coalition over POTA. After being political adversarie­s for nearly seven years, the then Congress president Sonia Gandhi got the DMK on board the United Progressiv­e Alliance (UPA) in 2004 by calling up Karunanidh­i to oust the BJP-led NDA from power in the Lok Sabha elections that year.

The DMK remained an important constituen­t of the UPA till March 2013 when it quit the coalition over the Manmohan Singh government’s stand on the Sri Lanka human rights issue at the UNHRC session at Geneva. After contesting the 2014 Lok Sabha elections separately, the two parties again came together for the 2016 assembly polls. But the period between 2014 and 2016 saw bitter exchanges between the two parties.

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