The Asian Age

19 AIADMK MLAs oppose EPS

TTV moves loyalists to Puducherry resort till trust vote

- AGE CORRESPOND­ENT CHENNAI, AUG. 22

A day after the AIADMK emerged stronger with the merger of its two factions, as many as 19 party MLAs loyal to T.T.V. Dhinakaran told Tamil Nadu Governor CH Vidyasagar Rao on Tuesday that they “no longer had confidence” in chief minister Edappadi K. Palaniswam­i and withdrew their support to him.

Soon after, Leader of Opposition M.K. Stalin appealed to the Governor to direct the chief minister to prove his majority in the Assembly immediatel­y.

The 19 legislator­s who support Mr Dhinakaran, nephew of V.K. Sasikala, the party’s jailed general secretary, were immediatel­y moved to Windflower resort in Puducherry.

Sources said that the legislator­s will stay at the resort till the vote of confidence on the floor of the House. Tight security has been arranged at the resort.

In identical letters submitted to Mr Rao, the 19 AIADMK MLAs accused Mr Palaniswam­i of being “corrupt” and “encouragin­g corruption” at all levels and also took a dig at the merger of EPS and OPS factions of the AIADMK.

“I hereby express my lack of confidence on Mr Edappadi K. Palaniswam­i and withdraw my earlier support given to him... I hereby submit that I have not given up my membership of the AIADMK and I am only doing my duty as a conscious citizen to express the abuse and misuse of the Constituti­on provision,” the letter submitted by the MLAs said.

In the 234-member Tamil Nadu Assembly, which was reduced to 233 after the death of former chief minister J. Jayalalith­aa and the cancellati­on of the RK Nagar by-polls, the AIADMK needs at least

Continued from Page 1 117 votes to remain in power.

Right now, AIADMK has 134 seats in the Assembly, excluding the House Speaker and Jayalalith­aa. While O. Palaniswam­i claims to have 104 MLAs and Mr Panneersel­vam 10, Mr Dhinakaran is alleged to have 22 to 25, including three Independen­t MLAs.

In his letter to the governor, Mr Stalin said that consequent to the MLAs’ letter, expressing lack of confidence in Mr Palaniswam­i, an unpreceden­ted constituti­onal crisis had erupted. He asked the governor “to uphold the constituti­onal norms and the parameters laid down by the Supreme Court in the famous “SR Bommai case”, and ask the chief minister to prove his majority in the Assembly immediatel­y.

Political observers say that the no-confidence letter by the 19 MLAs is a “pressure tactic” to stop any punitive action against Ms Sasikala.

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