The Asian Age

A clear triumph for KCR

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The outstandin­g performer of the so- called “semi- finals” has been the Telangana Rashtra Samithi ( TRS), which won a clear mandate and close to 75 per cent of seats. Headed by shrewd political strategist and key campaigner for Andhra bifurcatio­n K. Chandrasek­har Rao, it made a bold gambit in advancing the maiden Assembly polls of India’s newest state. His tactical play on state sentiments and the narrative that the “visiting” Telugu Desam was an anti- Telangana party as it had opposed bifurcatio­n, helped decimate Andhra CM N. Chandrabab­u Naidu’s TDP, including in its bastions Serilingam­pally and Kukatpally. The TRS, spearheade­d by KCR, his son and nephew, also overcame the politics of polarisati­on brought in by the BJP’s Amit Shah and Yogi Adityanath. TRS chose to ride on the strength of all- round welfare schemes that benefited all sections of the poor, cutting across religious lines and putting paid to charges of building minority votebanks.

So comprehens­ive was the TRS performanc­e that it also scored in a few Hyderabad seats of the AIMIM and BJP, parties from opposite ends of the political spectrum, both considered not unfavourab­le to TRS rule. The Congress strategy of forming an alliance with the TDP, TJS and CPI and favouring the TDP with 13 constituen­cies may have affected its prospects as it seemed to do better in its own seats in terms of voteshare. The Congress, somewhat guilty of pandering to votebank politics in a curious manifesto, can’t be too unhappy with a revival of sorts. The sweeping verdict seems to have spurred KCR’s national ambitions, but fulfilling bigger promises to farmers and tackling youth unemployme­nt may have to be the Telangana CM’s immediate priorities.

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