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DMK is a corporate company meant for elite, not for masses: EPS

DMK is a corporate company meant for elite, not for masses: EPS

The Hindu21 hours ago
Leader of Opposition and AIADMK general secretary Edappadi K. Palaniswami on Friday reiterated his charge that the ruling DMK has always been functioning as a 'corporate company', mainly serving the elite section in the society and not for masses in Tamil Nadu.
Addressing a public gathering in Tiruvannamalai as part of his State-wide tour, Mr. Palaniswami said unlike AIADMK where a ordinary person can reach top position in the party over the years and could also even become a Chief Minister like him, persons with ordinary background cannot climb up in the hierarchy of DMK and become its top leader. 'I am the example of an ordinary person becoming a Chief Minister and heading a powerful political party. It's possible only in AIADMK where only loyalty matters and in DMK, it promotes dynastic politics,' he said.
The AIADMK leader claimed surging crowds during his State-wide tour clearly exemplifies support of people for the part. It also shows their frustration towards the DMK government. Chief Minister M.K. Stalin has been daydreaming of winning his second term in the 2026 assembly elections. Mr. Stalin is faraway from reality, he said.
The former Chief Minister criticised the Ungaludan Stalin Scheme, which was launched by Mr. Stalin in July to address people's grievances at special camps in the State, as the State machinery including government officials has been used for the scheme, mainly to propagate about DMK to voters ahead of assembly polls.
'After four years in power, Mr. Stalin was aware only now about people's grievances in 46 different areas that should be addressed. The scheme is a ploy to draw voters towards DMK,' he alleged.
Contrary to the claim made by Mr. Stalin that 98% of 525 poll promises were fulfilled, Mr. Palaniswami listed many poll promises made by DMK during 2021 polls that remain unfulfilled. Some of them include increase in total working days from 100 to 150 under Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (MGNREGA) scheme, cancellation of education loan, ₹100 subsidy for LPG cylinders and reduction of petrol and diesel prices in the State, he claimed.
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Images of sanitation workers being dragged away by the police and detained in different locations across the city sparked an outrage among rights activists and DMK allies. While VCK leaders openly criticised the Greater Chennai Corporation and Greater Chennai police's handling of the protest, CPI and CPI(M) announced a protest condemning the DMK government over the midnight arrests. Speaking to ThePrint, VCK deputy general secretary Vanniyarasu said the way police dealt with protesting workers was unacceptable. 'That is not the way the police should act against oppressed people. They should have treated them well and the Chennai corporation should have held talks with the workers to solve it amicably,' Vanniyarasu said. Similarly, the CPI(M) also condemned the police action and demanded that Chief Minister M.K. Stalin intervene in the matter. Speaking to ThePrint, CPI(M) state secretary P. Shanmugam criticised the administration's handling of the situation. 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Sathiya Moorthy told ThePrint that the sanitation workers' protest is more than a labour issue. 'It is yet another test of the alliance's social justice claim by the DMK-led state government. It will dampen the image of the DMK and its allies on the ground. More importantly, the allies will be losing their hold on the ground. For instance, VCK's strong vote is from the Dalits and if they do not speak up for sanitation workers, it will affect them,' he said He added that repeated public disagreements within the DMK alliance could embolden the BJP and AIADMK to exploit caste and class divisions in upcoming campaigns. Political analyst Raveendran Duraisamy, however, said the situation is more likely to damage the allies than the ruling DMK. 'Although it would damage the reputation of the alliance, the DMK might not lose its traditional vote bank since it is still eight more months before the state goes into assembly election mode. Tamil Nadu voters often decide based on broader Dravidian versus BJP narratives, and that gives Stalin some breathing space,' Duraisamy told ThePrint. This is not the first time that the DMK and its allies have been at odds. Over the past three years, a series of incidents have tested the alliance. It all began with the protest in October 2024, when workers of the Samsung plant at Sriperumbudur struck work over wage parity and working conditions. While the CPI(M)'s labour union stood in solidarity with workers, demanding the state government intervene and recognise the union, the DMK government negotiated for a swift resumption of production, putting the demand in abeyance. VCK also criticised the state government on the lack of worker-friendly reforms, prompting DMK ministers including Industries Minister T.R.B. Raja to step in and mediate between the labour union and Samsung. Similarly, in May 2024, when the state government organised the Muthamizh Murugan conference in Pazhani in Dindigul district, VCK alleged that Hindus had been given special seats at the conference. He also questioned the government for organising a conference that emboldened what he termed the Hindutva agenda. Just last month, after a 23-year-old Dalit man in Tirunelveli was killed allegedly by his partner's brother for being in an inter-caste relationship, VCK, CPI and CPI(M) demanded the DMK-led government bring in a separate law against honour killing. Congress, VCK, CPI, and CPI(M) separately held protests across the state to raise this demand. Similarly, VCK leaders have repeatedly alleged their cadres were denied permission to hoist party flags in certain villages. One such flashpoint occurred in March 2024 in Cuddalore district, leading to tense stand-offs between VCK workers and the police. Political analyst P. Sigamani said that these incidents have left behind a simmering resentment within the allies' party workers. 'For now, the sanitation workers issue is in front of the DMK-led alliance. Although DMK allies continue to voice discontent within the safe boundaries of coalition politics, the true cost of this friction will be known only when the elections are closer,' Sigamani told ThePrint. (Edited by Viny Mishra) Also read: Trash piles up across Chennai areas as sanitation workers protest privatisation move

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