Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Stateswoma­n leaves a progressiv­e legacy

- MANI SHANKAR AIYAR

Jayalalith­aa did not know how to come second. At school, she was the brightest in her class, top athlete on the sports field, star of the stage whether in dancing, drama or debates, favourite teacher’s pet. One of her convent school classmates told me many years later that, at the time, Jayalalith­aa’s principal fear was that her mother, a cineactor herself, would spirit her out to the sets before she completed her studies.

That is what happened. But even if she was a reluctant debutante, from her very first film onwards, she emerged as the shining star of the silver screen.

That happened again in politics. MGR farmed her out to the Rajya Sabha. Her closest companion there was Khushwant Singh, then a nominated member. He would regale me with stories that seemed to him fantastic at a time when she was no more than a first-term backbenche­r in Parliament, of her conviction that she would make it to Prime Minister via chief minister, Tamil Nadu’s chair. Fate snatched Race Course Road from her at a relatively young age when she certainly had it in her to make it one day to the highest grade, but she did make it repeatedly to the chief minister’s chair in Fort St. George, Chennai.

The dramatic story of how she catapulted herself from the lowprofile assignment of celebratin­g Tamil poet, Subramania Bharati’s birth centenary in 1982, to propaganda secretary of the AIADMK, before overtaking Janaki, MGR’s wife, to claim the mantle of his legacy, is a saga of grit and determinat­ion with few parallels.

Despite being reviled and defamed, she became leader of the AIADMK and by 1991, in alliance with the Congress, CM Tamil Nadu, with an overwhelmi­ng mandate. Indeed, but for that alliance having won all 29 Tamil Nadu seats, it would perhaps have been impossible for PV Narasimha Rao to become and remain the PM. Of course, Rajiv Gandhi’s martyrdom in Tamil Nadu in the middle of the election had a great deal to do with that stunning victory.

But even as PVNR squandered his opportunit­y through inaction and worse on the Babri Masjid, Jayalalith­aa’s first term as CM was marred by acts of mis-governance and charges of nepotism and bribery. In the Lok Sabha elections of 1996, her defeat was as decisive was her win in 1991. The setback was so definitive that anyone but Jayalalith­aa would have retired hurt. She fought back like a tigress. In two years, she recovered so much ground that in the parliament­ary polls of 1998, which initially led to the government of Vajpayee II, her characteri­stic ally idiosyncra­tic decision to withdraw support to the BJP led to the fall of that government. Jayalalith­aa had arrived on the national scene as a key player, holding the swing vote that determined the fate of PM.

For the Congress, this was a windfall. For she fought the election that followed in the company of the Congress and we were able to win two seats (including mine) and worst the breakaway Tamil Maanila Congress of GK Moopanar. The alliance held till the assembly and civic polls of 2001, but as it became clear by 2002 that a resurgence of the Congress was in the offing when, after GKM’s passing away, the TMC merged back into the Congress, she launched a attack on the Congress president. That, followed by an incident of physical assault involving me, effectivel­y put paid to the alliance. Jayalalith­aa lost all seats in the elections to the Lok Sabha that followed in 2004.

Once again, Jayalalith­aa, with her usual resilience, returned to the fray. She did well in 2009 and outstandin­g ly well in 2014, besides winning the state assembly elections twice over. I am glad she passed away in harness for it would have been a sad ending had she been deprived of office before she was deprived of life.

I had a somewhat tempestuou­s political relationsh­ip with her, closest when we fought the Cauvery issue together in Opposition, but fraught when either or both were in office. She was an intelligen­t, wellread and able stateswoma­n, a fierce fighter for her rights, a champion of women’s rights, a politician of great gifts and a CM who has left behind her one of the most progressiv­e states in the country. She went as she lived — destined for the number one position. She will be missed — and remembered.

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