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Trojan Horse
The Caravan
|May 2025
The BJP's alliance with the AIADMK masks its long game for Tamil Nadu / Politics
Ahead of the 2026 Tamil Nadu assembly elections, at a high-profile press conference in Chennai on 11 April, the union home minister Amit Shah formally announced the revival of the Bharatiya Janata Party's alliance with the All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam. Flanked by the AIADMK's general secretary, Edappadi K Palaniswami, and the BJP's outgoing state president, K Annamalai, Shah confirmed that the upcoming campaign would be led by Palaniswami, signalling a tactical pivot. While Shah's visit was ostensibly to appoint a new state BJP chief, the subtext was clear: the price of alliance was the removal of Annamalai. It is part of a long-term strategy to form the government in Tamil Nadu by 2031.
Annamalai, a former IPS officer and once the BJP's great Tamil hope, had transformed the party's image in the state. Under his leadership, the BJP's vote share surged from a negligible 3.6 percent in 2019 to over 11 percent in 2024, thanks to high-decibel campaigns such as En Mann, En Makkal—my soil, my people. But his aggressive anti-Dravidian stance strained relations with AIADMK, particularly after his criticism of icons J Jayalalithaa and CN Annadurai, leading to the alliance's collapse in September 2023. To stitch the coalition back together, the RSS ideologue S Gurumurthy—who has often served as a bridge between the BJP's central leadership and regional forces—is said to have played a vital part. Shortly before the conference, a meeting took place at his Mylapore residence, during which Shah, Annamalai and the union minister for information and broadcasting and parliamentary affairs, L Murugan, were present. Soon after, the BJP replaced Annamalai with Nainar Nagendran, a former AIADMK leader from the Thevar community.
This story is from the May 2025 edition of The Caravan.
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