The Hindu (Visakhapatnam)

Polls come and go, but backwardne­ss remains in Chittoor LS constituen­cy

Gradual decline in sugarcane and paddy cultivatio­n, exodus of young workers to cities in search of jobs, little or no prospects in the health and education sectors and closure of the dairy cooperativ­e sector are some of the issues that have been marring t

- K. Umashanker

fter 17 general elections since its formation in 1951, the Chittoor Lok Sabha constituen­cy remains one of the most backward areas in the country. Making it an SC-Reserved constituen­cy in 2009 or the trifurcati­on of the 103-year-old Chittoor district in 2022 has not changed the fate of the people here.

Of the 17 general elections from 1952 till 2019, the Chittoor Lok Sabha seat was wrested by the Indian National Congress nine times, the Telugu Desam Party seven times and the YSR Congress Party once.

The last time the Congress won from here was in 1991, after losing to the Telugu Desam Party for the —rst time in the previous election in 1984, which was the debut of N.T. Rama Rao’s TDP in the general elections.

The TDP won the seat again in 1996, followed by mid-term polls in 1998 and 1999. It continued on the path of victory in the 2004, 2009, and 2014 elections but lost to the YSRCP in 2019.

Spread over seven assembly segments of Chandragir­i

A(now in the newly carved Tirupati district) and six constituen­cies that belong to the residual Chittoor district, including Nagari, Gangadhara Nellore (SC), Puthalapat­tu (SC), Chittoor, Palamaner, and Kuppam, the constituen­cy primarily consists of the agrarian belt, dominated by mango and groundnut growers.

Perennial drought

Known for perennial drought conditions in the western mandals from Chittoor to the Kuppam region, there is a gradual decline in paddy and sugarcane cultivatio­n. After the closure of the cooperativ­e sugar factories and private units in 2000, sugarcane cultivatio­n started slowly disappeari­ng from the constituen­cy’s map. In the absence of any perennial river or irrigation water project, coupled with average to poor rainfall every year, the face of agricultur­e has started receiving a beating in recent years.

Unemployme­nt

Rural poverty and discouragi­ng agricultur­e prospects have forced thousands of youth, including those educated above the degree courses, to —nd their way to Bengaluru, Chennai, Hyderabad, and other northern cities for employment, leaving a vacuum in the arena of cultivatio­n.

The constituen­cy witnesses the worst unemployme­nt problem due to the complete absence of industries. Over 80% of the youth, immediatel­y after graduation, are forced to leave their villages in search of jobs in neighbouri­ng Karnataka and Tamil Nadu. It’s an open secret that over 4,000 youth from the Kuppam region alone travel daily to Bengaluru or adjoining industrial townships in Tamil Nadu to work as daily wage workers and skilled workers.

Known for its —nest varieties of mangoes, the constituen­cy has mango orchards spread over one lakh hectares, with an annual output of over 5 lakh metric tonnes. Though the mango farmers have insisted on forming a Mango Board for four decades, it has not materializ­ed.

After the closure of the cooperativ­e dairy sector in the region two decades ago, the dairy farmers cherish hurt feelings that they are being exploited by private dairies. With an incredible capacity to churn out 40 lakh litres of milk per day, Chittoor was once known as ‘Andhra’s Anand’, but those days are gone now.

The demand for a railway line to Chennai from Chittoor and public representa­tions to facilitate Chittoor as a halting railway station for the Express trains between Tirupati and Katpadi junctions remain unful—lled for two decades.

The Chittoor Lok Sabha constituen­cy also has no signi—cant prospects in education and health sectors. While the Dravidian University in Kuppam, establishe­d in 1997, is on the verge of slipping into oblivion thanks to its language and linguistic motto, coupled with drasticall­y falling admissions, the Chittoor region has no other University or government medical or engineerin­g college. The western parts of the constituen­cy remained the hotbed of child marriages for several decades, with a respite only in recent years.

A political highlight of the constituen­cy is that the TDP national president, N. Chandrabab­u Naidu, made his political debut from the Chandragir­i Assembly constituen­cy of Chittoor Lok Sabha constituen­cy in 1978. He was the youngest MLA at 28 years old and a Cabinet Minister at 30. Having won from Kuppam Assembly constituen­cy for seven consecutiv­e terms, Naidu is contesting for the eighth time from there.

The YSRCP wrested the Chittoor Lok Sabha in 2019. However, its sitting MP, N. Reddappa, known as the loyalist of Forest Minister Peddireddi Ramachandr­a Reddy, has drawn severe criticism that he remained inaccessib­le to the publiceven as the pressing problems remained unaddresse­d.

The YSRCP leadership announced Mr. Reddappa as the MLA candidate for the Gangadhara Nellore (SC) constituen­cy but later allowed him to recontest as the Chittoor MP. His opponent is TDP’s Daggumalla Prasada Rao, a former IRS oŸcer. Mr. Rao has promised to “eradicate unemployme­nt” and “usher in industrial boom” in the region, coupled with an “agricultur­e and horticultu­re revolution.”

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