The Sunday Guardian

Jagan will invoke YSR’s memory to gain ground

There is a sentiment in AP that whoever undertook a padayatra since 20014 came to power.

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elections, albeit to a truncated Andhra Pradesh. At the time of his walkathon, Naidu was 62 and suffering from diabetes and blood pressure problem.

Jagan, 44, has decided to set out on a longer padyatra than that undertaken by the two former CMs.

His election campaign strategist, Prashant Kishor’s Indian Political Action Committee (I-PAC) is coordinati­ng the route map and nitty-gritty of his padayatra.

Jagan, who had announced a spate of welfare schemes and freebies to people at his party plenary in July, would be highlighti­ng that to the people, besides gaining firsthand informatio­n about their problems. But according to sources from the I-PAC, Jagan would mostly be trying to rekindle the memories of his late father.

“Jagan would be covering more number of villages and Assembly constituen­cies than his father. But wherever he goes, he will recollect the bonding his father had with the place and its people. We are ensuring that he would garland his father’s statues erected to mark his 2003 padayatra,” said a party functionar­y.

However, unlike this father and Naidu, Jagans’ padayatra would be interrupte­d every Friday as the CBI court hasn’t granted him exemption from personal appearance in a clutch of disproport­ionate assets cases before it. He will have to take a break from his padayatra every Thursday night to rush back to Hyderabad.

Jagan’s aides and I-PAC team members are tightlippe­d on his mode of transport to and fro from Hyderabad, but they hinted at hiring a helicopter to save travel time.

While all arrangemen­ts are in place for the event, YSR Congress leaders are apprehensi­ve that the ruling TDP might create obstacles. The police is insisting that Jagan should take permission for his route map as well as public meetings he intends to address at various places in the next six months. YSR Congress spokesman Ambati Ramababu told this newspaper that the TDP was afraid of Jagan’s walkathon.

TDP general secretary Varla Ramaiah refuted the charge and said that it was the responsibi­lity of the police to ensure smooth passage of vehicles and people on the roads where Jagan would walk. “If an opposition leader refused to take police permission for his padayatra how can people trust him to lead the state?” asked Ramaiah during a press conference in Amaravati on Saturday. Meanwhile, the TDP has admitted an YSR Congress MLA V, Rajeswarai from Rampachoda­varam (ST) into the ruling party. Sources said that the TDP is keen on admitting into its fold a few more YSR Congress MLAs to demoralise Jagan.

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