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The Dravidian Wall

Patience, experience pay off for DMK바카라s Stalin

Tamil Nadu has sent out multiple messages with its poll verdict. By returning DMK to power after 10 long years on an ­ant­i-incumbency plank against the ruling AIADMK, the state has rewarded in-coming chief minister M.K. Stalin바카라s patience and ­experience, traits found wanting in outgoing Edappadi K. Palaniswami (EPS). It바카라s also a vote for political stability, which EPS lacked despite a ­legislative majority. In comparison, Stalin바카라s father, late M. Karunanidhi, headed a minority government for five years from 2006, but did not let citizens feel it.

The continued marginalisation of the 바카라national parties바카라 means Tamil Nadu remains Dravidian to the core. An over-ambitious and miscalculating BJP, like the Congress of yore, can now either toe the Dravidian line as a junior ally, or recede into the shadows. After winning a record four assembly seats in the AIADMK바카라s company, the ­decision will matter for the BJP, as their prospects in the Lok Sabha polls of 2024 appear increasingly unsure. Tamil Nadu as a swing state has 39 MPs, but the BJP바카라s ­alliance-leader has to re-invent itself, after anticipated post-poll rebellion within the AIADMK.

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For Stalin, whose strategy owes to patience and ­experience, observers feel the long wait for the hot seat is finally over. For a cadre-based, tradition-bound party, Stalin ­readily accepted the need for professional help바카라of Sunil in 2016 and the latter바카라s mentor Prashant Kishor in 2021. Having been ­assured of his own position at the helm of the party after his father바카라s death, he used their inputs to promote the prospects of the ­alliance over that of his party.

In comparison, EPS still appeared tentative, despite being a fairly successful chief minister over four years. He put inner-party competition with O. Panneerselvam (OPS), his immediate predecessor and later his deputy chief minister, over that of the challenge posed by the DMK alliance. This meant EPS바카라s poll ­strategies centred on him and no one else바카라­ultimately leading to the party바카라s defeat.

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Learning from the experience of 2011 and 2016바카라when ally Congress snatched 63 and 41 seats, respectively, but won only five and eight바카라Stalin contained them to 25 seats this time. The result바카라Congress won 18 seats with the highest strike rate of 72 per cent for any party this time, while the coalition leader DMK polled 34 per cent votes and won 133 seats, including those of allies like MDMK, which contested on the party바카라s Rising Sun symbol. In all, DMK바카라s allies won nearly 40 of 60 seats, or two-thirds, against AIADMK allies winning nine of 43 seats (PMK 5, BJP 4).

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Stalin now has his hands full, from Covid management to economic crisis, with an ­inherited Rs 5-lakh crore debt and slowed down GST recovery from the Centre, among others. On top of this, he has to deliver on poll promises like putting Rs 4,000 in the hands of every family바카라not as a freebie as critics deem, but as stimulus for local economic recovery as exp­erts have been arguing at the national level. His choices of ministers, especially for health, finance and industries바카라to reinvigorate the ­economy, create jobs, and restore family incomes and ­government revenues바카라will be critical.

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The CM-elect has begun well, promising to work with predecessor EPS for the common good of the state. But, with the BJP at the Centre, he will have to walk the ­tightrope. Apart from pressure to ditch the Congress in the state, Stalin will have problems over NEET, NEP and other identity iss­ues unique to the state, which PM Modi has simplistically portrayed as 바카라language and culture issues바카라 in his post-poll message to Tamil voters.

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But then, these are also issues over which the unbending Supreme Court is the final arbiter. Stalin has time till the 2024 general elections to prove that he can achieve as much at the national level, while delivering on local ­promises, expectations and aspirations.

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Moorthy, a political analyst and columnist, is Distinguished Fellow and Head of Chennai Initiative, Observer Research Foundation. He is also the author of Justice Party to Jayalalithaa, and Jallikattu: The New Symbol of Tamil Angst. Views expressed are personal.

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