कोशिश गोल्ड - मुक्त
THE CONGRESS IN ITS LABYRINTH
India Today
|February 15, 2021
On January 25, as former Congress president Rahul Gandhi returned to Delhi at the end of a threeday visit to Tamil Nadu (the second in 10 days), the prospects of his party’s alliance with the DMK for the upcoming assembly poll remained uncertain. What caused the ripple was DMK leader and Arakkonam MP S. Jagathrakshakan’s assertion that his party would lead the alliance in neighboring Puducherry—where a Congress minis try steered by V. Narayanaswamy is in office—in the summer polls to the 30seat Puducherry assembly. Meanwhile, DMK leaders were not invited to Rahul’s meet ings (all in the western part of Tamil Nadu), and he campaigned without can passing for the coalition.
While many in the state Congress seemed certain that the Secular Progressive Alliance (SPA) will not hold, Rahul put doubts to rest as he told journalists at Aravakurichi in Karur district that the DMKCongress alliance would continue, and that his party had accepted DMK president M.K. Stalin as their chief ministerial candidate. The latter two went on record on January 30, say ing the alliance was on firm ground in Tamil Nadu, though he was quite evasive on how it would all work out in Puducherry.
It’s early days but both Stalin and the chief ministerial candidate of the ruling AIADMK, incumbent Edappadi K. Palaniswami (EPS), have hinted during electioneering that their respective alliances may have to accommodate more parties than last time, implying fewer seats for the main allies (the Congress and the Left for the DMK and the BJP for the AIADMK). Both the Dravidian majors foresee a tough battle ahead and are keen to play to their strengths and secure a majority on their own in this first election after the passing of leaders M. Karunanidhi (DMK) and J. Jayalalithaa (AIADMK).
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