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Until the recent past, the two-leaves symbolised MG Ramachandran's legacy and the AIADMK's victories. The party under J Jayalalithaa won back-to-back Assembly elections in 2011 and 2016 – a feat unheard of in Tamil Nadu in several decades. No one, perhaps, would have thought that this symbol, and the victory it denotes in the minds of the public, would be so elusive for the party that is no longer is one entity.
Frozen by the Election Commission, the two ‘official’ factions of the AIADMK, led by Edappadi Palaniswami and O Panneerselvam, have been battling it out in Delhi. The party’s deputy general secretary TTV Dhinakaran went to jail for allegedly trying to bribe EC officials to get the symbol for his team.
On Thursday, another player muddied the waters further. Deepa Jayakumar, the niece of late Chief Minister Jayalalithaa, is now in New Delhi to meet the Election Commission, and has reportedly claimed that she is the true master of the two-leaves symbol.
She has also demanded that the EC conduct fresh elections for the post of General Secretary of the AIADMK.
Whether this will carry any weight with the EC – considering Deepa is not even a member of the AIADMK – remains to be seen.
The daughter of Jayalalithaa’s brother Jayakumar, Deepa first came into the limelight when she tried to meet her ailing aunt at the Apollo hospital in Chennai, but was not allowed entry.
Ahead of the now-cancelled RK Nagar bye-poll, to fill the Assembly seat vacated by her aunt, Deepa created the MGR Amma Deepa Peravai – which she clarified was not a political party, but a federation.
Later, she filed her nomination as an independent candidate for the bye-poll, but was pretty much out of the limelight after the poll was cancelled on allegations of vote-buying.
Jayalalithaa’s niece made the news once again on Sunday, as there was high drama outside the late leader’s house, Veda Nilayam, in Chennai’s Poes Garden. Deepa had claimed that she was called to the house by her brother Deepak for paying a floral tribute to their aunt, but was stopped from entering.
Deepak for his part claimed that Deepa was allowed to enter but decided to create a ruckus anyway. But Deepa refuted these claims.
Visibly flustered, Deepa had declared to mediapersons that she will claim Jayalalithaa’s legacy.
(This article was originally published on The News Minute and has been republished with permission.)
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