Weeks after it happened, people
are still talking of the phone call between two women chief ministers that
changed the contours of Tamil Nadu's politics. It was a phone call from Tamil
Nadu's J. Jayalalithaa to West Bengal 's Mamta
Banerjee, discussing the possibility of a "Federal Front" after the
Lok Sabha elections. And it created a storm in the southern state's political
circles whose reverberations are still being felt.
During the conversation, Jayalalithaa
acknowledged Banerjee's warmth - that the Trinamool Congress chief has no
reservations on her heading the union government after the elections if the
numbers work out, that is. And Banerjee was celebrating the "blow" Jayalalithaa
administrated to the Left by calling off a proposed alliance in the so-called
Third Front.
Jayalalithaa wants to secure
the maximum number of seats of the 40 at stake, including one from Puducherry, as
for her, every MP counts. She aspires for the AIADMK to become a key player in
the next union government - if none of the UPA and NDA get enough seats on
their own to acquire a majority.
While the two women political
leaders rejoiced, the political strategies of Muthuvel Karunanidhi's DMK and
actor Vijayakant's DMDK swiftly changed. Karunanidhi deputed his lieutenants to
New Delhi to
meet the CPI-M's Prakash Karat to clinch a deal. Vijayakant sent his brother-in-law
to New Delhi to
meet BJP leaders Rajnath Singh and Nitin Gadkari.
Another interesting aspect of
Tamil Nadu politics is that except for Jayalalitha, the other major players - Karunanidhi,
Vijayakant, Ramadoss and Vaiko - are focused on the 2016 assembly elections and
the possible alliances then.
None of the senior Tamil Nadu
leaders, except for Jayalalithaa, want to maximise their presence in the Lok
Sabha. What is their hidden agenda? To prevent the Congress getting a foothold.
Both Jayalalithaa and Karunanidhi want the state Congress decimated.
The shrewed political
manipulation was thanks to Karunanidhi's son M.K. Stalin. It was he who
rejected the idea of an alliance with the Congress, saying the DMK should
instead focus on the 2016 assembly polls.
The other major development
of Tamil Nadu politics is a formidable combination conceived by the BJP's prime
ministerial candidate Narendra Modi - an alliance with the DMDK and also to
rope in Vaiko's MDMK and Ramadoss' PMK. If such a combination goes viral with
Modi addressing three or four rallies, the BJP will not only will gain in
organisational strength but could also claim the second slot in the state's
politics.
There are some political
pundits who bet that a Vijayakant-led front will see Jayalalithaa getting the
minimum seats and pushing the DMK to the third slot. Vijayakant's DMDK has such
a mass voter following in many parts of Tamil Nadu that the BJP wants to
capitalise on this in formulating a strategy for the 2016 assembly polls.
The DMK is a cadre-based
political party but ridden with family quarrels. The DMK has also fielded many
of Karunanidhi relatives. Thus, after the Karunanidhi era (he is 89), many
senior DMK leaders may prefer to go with the AIADMK or the DMDK - and few with
the MDMK.
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