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It’s official now – Vijaykanth will battle 2016 on his own. After months of suspense, Vijaykanth, also known as Captain, leader of the Desiya Murpokku Dravida Kazhagam (DMDK), the party with the second highest number of MLAs in Tamil Nadu in the last election, made this announcement at an event in Chennai on Thursday.
This decision is being seen as a setback for the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK), both of which were wooing Vijaykanth into an alliance.
Raja scoffed at suggestions that this would be a setback to the BJP.
The DMK appears to be rather vexed with the entire alliance process. Insiders say that after positive signals from Vijaykanth, this decision came as a sudden U-turn.
The recently formed People’s Welfare Front (PWF) comprising Vaiko, Dalit leader Thol Thirumavalavan and the two Left parties have also been hoping to bring Captain onboard.
The wait for Vijaykanth has been long and taxing for both the DMK and the BJP. Frustration was writ large on the brows of Tamilisai Soundarrajan, President of the Tamil Nadu BJP on Wednesday night at a public meeting in Chennai.
She said this drawing a reference to tongue in cheek comment by DMK chief Karunanidhi, a day earlier.
On March 8, Karunanidhi made a cryptic comment to reporters at the party headquarters. “The fruit has slipped, now it just needs to fall into the milk,” he stated, hinting at alliance talks with Vijaykanth progressing well.
The BJP has been at its wits’ end in Tamil Nadu for the past few months. And the party is not alone in this frustration. The DMK too was getting antsy at the prolonged silence of this one man – Vijaykanth.
“Despite agreeing to most of his terms, including announcing him as the Chief Ministerial candidate, Vijaykanth’s silence was irritating us,” said a BJP leader who spoke on condition of anonymity. The reason:
The DMDK’s record in the past two Assembly elections have been impressive. In its very first state election in 2006, the party contested alone, garnering 8.38% voteshare and winning a lone MLA seat for its leader Vijaykanth.
In 2011, the DMDK decided to align with Jayalalithaa’s All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (AIADMK), emerging as the second largest party and the main Opposition party in the state.
But problems remain. The DMDK cadre is reportedly keen on allying with the DMK in 2016, since they feel there is a better chance of a good performance in the state. “This announcement will bring joy and enthusiasm to the cadre,” said a leader of the DMDK who did not wish to be named. “But we are not sure whether this decision will change in the future,” he said.
A tectonic shift is now expected in 2016, as a weakened DMK hopes to take on the might of the ruling AIADMK with only the Congress in tow. The AIADMK, which swept the 2011 Assembly polls with 38.4% voteshare, is likely to be laughing all the way to polls, with Vijaykanth’s decision.
The DMK, which cobbled up a voteshare of 22.39% in 2011, is going to have to battle very hard to better that figure. The Congress, weakened by the exit of former Union Minister GK Vasan, is also likely to see a slip in voteshare from 9.3% in 2011 state polls.
For Vijaykanth himself, 2016 will be a test of his true standing with the electorate after 2009 Lok Sabha polls, which was the last election he battled alone. In 2009, his party picked up 10.3% voteshare. Most political hawks though predict that the DMDK’s voteshare is likely to slide to half that figure.
On February 20, Captain, at a public rally in Kanchipuram, asked his cadre – “Do you want to be a king or a kingmaker?” The cadre roared back – “King”. Vijaykanth, for now, appears to have set his sights on a long term political strategy of being the only credible alternative to the Dravidian majors in the state.
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Published: 10 Mar 2016,05:10 AM IST