AIADMK crisis: 30 rebel MLAs to announce support to TVK
Shanmugam said the AIADMK needs a “new life” and backed support for TVK to revive Amma’s rule.
PTI
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CVe Shanmugam said they would meet CM C Joseph Vijay to provide a letter supporting his government (Screengrab)
Chennai, 12 May
The opposition AIADMK appeared headed for a split on Tuesday after a group of MLAs revolted against party chief Edappadi K Palaniswami, accusing him of seeking an alliance with archrival DMK, and announced support for the Vijay-led government ahead of the floor test on Wednesday.
About 30
MLAs, led by senior leaders SP Velumani and C Ve Shanmugam, are believed to be
in the rebel camp that has questioned Palaniswami's leadership following the
party's debacle in the 23 April assembly polls, where it won only 47 out of the
164 seats it contested.
Speaking
to reporters, Shanmugam said they would meet C Joseph Vijay to provide a letter
supporting his government. He also alleged that party general secretary
Edappadi K Palaniswami wanted to form a government with the DMK's support.
Pointing
out that the AIADMK was floated to oppose and "uproot" the DMK,
Shanmugam said all the party members opposed Palaniswami's proposal to form a
government with the support of the MK Stalin-led party. He added that any such
proposal contradicted the AIADMK's fundamental principles.
The party
needs a "new life now," and the "Amma (Jayalalithaa) rule"
should return, and therefore, he added, they should support TVK.
The AIADMK
leadership, however, dismissed the allegations as "rumours" and
accused the dissident leaders of "unleashing a bag of lies" after
failing to secure victories in their own districts.
In a post
on X, the party also alleged that Velumani, Shanmugam and C Vijayabaskar were
themselves seeking ministerial berths in the TVK government. It asserted that
alliance decisions could not be taken by a handful of MLAs and maintained that
party cadre remained firmly behind Palaniswami.
The
rumblings in the MGR-founded AIADMK revived memories of the internal power
struggles that followed the deaths of founder M G Ramachandran in 1987 and then
chief minister J Jayalalithaa in 2016.
DMK also
dismissed Shanmugam's claims of post-poll alliance talks between the two
parties, accusing him of trying to create a "split" within his own
party.
Taking
strong exception to Shanmugam's remarks, organising secretary RS Bharati
claimed that the AIADMK leader decided to support the Vijay-led TVK government
and therefore, made the "baseless charge".
Bharati
told reporters here that DMK president MK Stalin had already stated that the
Dravidian major would function as an opposition party.
"After
the election results, we already clarified that these reports were speculation
and rumours. This continues to be our stand," Bharati added.
Meanwhile,
the AIADMK senior leaders urged Palaniswami to convene a party's general
council meeting to thoroughly deliberate on the reasons for the electoral
debacle and to strengthen the party in the future.
The
1,34,25,260 votes the party received in the polls were for the AIADMK, for
"our alliance, for Two Leaves, for the people's chief minister called
Edappadiar," according to the party's official Twitter handle.
The
Twitter post also said Palaniswami painstakingly managed the party and that the
workers were with him only, and that AIADMK was not a party of a few MLAs but
one built on cadre strength. "They have now decided (to be with
Palaniswami)," it said.
Adding to
the twist, VCK chief Thol Thirumavalavan claimed that both the DMK and AIADMK
approached him to become the Tamil Nadu chief minister to head a possible
alliance the Dravidian archrivals could have forged to keep the TVK away from
power.
"I got information that they (DMK-AIADMK) had decided to make me a chief minister. However, after consulting with the party's senior leaders, we rejected it," Thirumavalavan told reporters here.
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