Deccan Chronicle

Post-bifurcatio­n, TRS puts other parties out of game THE LEFT parties have no representa­tion in the 119-member Legislativ­e Assembly. The TD party has almost disappeare­d in TS.

- S.N.C.N. ACHARYULU | DC

After the bifurcatio­n of the erstwhile state of Andhra Pradesh, and the dominance of the Telangana Rashtra Samiti (TRS), important political parties are disappeari­ng from the political stage in Telangana state.

The Left parties have no representa­tion in the 119member Legislativ­e Assembly. The Telugu Desam, which is in power in Andhra Pradesh, has almost disappeare­d in TS.

Neither the Left parties nor the TD are represente­d in the Telangana Legislativ­e Council.

The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) is not much better off and the Congress is heading in the same direction.

In the 2014 Assembly elections, the Communist Party of India (CPI) and Communist Party Marxist (CPM) won one seat each. The lone CPI MLA joined the TRS later. In the recent TS Assembly elections, neither of the two Left parties could win a single seat. CPI national secretary K. Narayana commented that the CPI got fewer votes than the number of the party membership, and if the situation does not improve, there will be just himself and one or two other leaders. Before the bifurcatio­n, Left parties were strong in Nalgonda, Khammam and some parts of other districts. Today, they have no representa­tion in either the Assembly or the Council. The bifurcatio­n affected the fortunes of the TD, too. In the combined AP, the Telugu Desam was stronger in the Telangana region than the Andhra region.

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