Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

DMKBJP tieup is a possibilit­y

The Dravidian party is a better bet for the BJP at the moment

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Prime minister Narendra Modi’s surprise and much publicised visit to meet with ailing DMK patriarch M Karunanidh­i has predictabl­y set the political dovecotes aflutter. It is the first time since 2004 that a degree of bonhomie has been seen between the two parties though the BJP was quick to say that this was nothing more than concern on the part of Mr Modi for the nonagenari­an leader. Still, the optics said it all. The PM, always careful about the political signals he sends out, was testing the waters in the larger interest of the party’s mission south. While it is still too early to predict how this will pan out politicall­y, one can’t blame the BJP for trying to build bridges with the DMK which is united and has a clear line of succession. The DMK’s succession planning has been smooth from Karunanidh­i to MK Stalin. The BJP’s alliance with the AIADMK was always fractious. But at least the party knew who it had to deal with as long as J Jayalalith­aa was around. Her passing has thrown her party into a state of disarray.

There is a strong anti-incumbency factor which will weigh against the AIADMK and any sympathy factor for Jayalalith­aa will have dissipated totally by 2019. The DMK’s chances, as of now, are fairly bright and this is unlikely to have escaped a party as politicall­y astute as the BJP. If a fortuitous alliance is forged, this could well be the big break that the BJP has been waiting for to breach the citadel of Fort St George.

From the DMK’s perspectiv­e, an alliance with the party that calls the shots at the Centre won’t be unwelcome – and could ease some of the pressure the party is facing in ongoing investigat­ions and judicial proceeding­s, including the 2G case. Those who argue that a rationalis­t party like the DMK would be a bad fit with the BJP are on the wrong track. The DMK as it is today is no different from any political party in Tamil Nadu and its primary goal is to get the best deal possible from the Centre. Given that pragmatism is the guiding principle of politics, a DMK-BJP alliance is very much in the realm of the possible.

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