Wednesday, March 29, 2006

How they stack up?

[Cross-posted in VKpedia]

The seat-sharing arrangement of the two major fronts is out. And it makes interesting reading, into the minds of the alliance leaders, that is.

Everywhere there is talk of coalitions in politics. The positives and the downsides of this have been argued ad nauseum, so I have nothing to add to it. Except that coalitions are here to stay. This is because politicians find it easy to divide territories along casteist lines. In the future, we might have political parties forged to protect the interests of micro-communities. So don't be surprised if there springs up a new party with the sole agenda of demanding equal rights for the "34th descendant of the late Shyama Sastry (1609 - 1658) of Needamangalam".

The DMK, as analysts point out, has allocated seats in such a way as to signify that it ackowledges its readiness for coalition politics. Contesting just 129 seats, the DMK needs to have a winning rate of 91.5% to form a government on its own. Many political watchers have termed this as yet another master-stroke by Mr. Karunanidhi. He has been generous in awarding seats to the coalition partners, more than what they might have expected themselves.

On the contrary, the ADMK is contesting 182 seats. One can easily discern two reasons behind this. First, the ADMK's coalition comprises of only one large party (the MDMK). The other parties have all been allotted only single-digit seats. Secondly, and this is more important, the ADMK supremo still believes that her party has enough in it to form a government on its own.

Some may claim that the ADMK's confidence is not well-founded. But one must not forget that Ms Jayalalithaa triumphed in the 2001 elections almost single-handedly. True, the opposition wasn't as formidable then, yet the ADMK did the improbable then. This year's fight is similar - it is the DPA's numbers against Ms Jayalalithaa's charisma. Who Which will triumph? We'll know in six weeks' time.

3 Comments:

At 4/04/2006 07:33:00 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

I fully agree with Sri Villy.
DPI will pose a tough fight with PMK. So its not going to be a cake walk for PMK. Dr.Ramadoss always urges people to speak in Tamil only. But his grandchildren (Anbumani's children) do not study Tamil at all. Anbumani always dress in western fashion (Pant, shirt, suit, coat). See P.Chidambaram, Finance Minister. Inspite of being a product of Harward, he dress in tamil fashion. Surely, this doesnt go well with people.

Avanga english padikkalam
nam tamil mattume padikkanumaa?
would be the reaction


Coming down south
Thevars and Telugus are dominant communities. So AIADMK and MDMK may together sweep South tamil Nadu. DMK is sure to be decimated in the South. In the west AIADMK-MDMK alliance may win Coimbatore which is the Telugu Kamma-bastion in Tamil Nadu.

 
At 4/04/2006 03:18:00 PM, Blogger Doctor Bruno said...

Contrary to the popular belief, this year, DMK will score in south and ADMK in north.

 
At 4/17/2006 09:05:00 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

DMK is just ahead of AIADMK. MK and co have to campaign hard to get a clear majority.

The predominant advantage of DMK is the selection of candidates.This time they will score equally to AIADMK in the south TN. (It is due to KKSSR,APPAVU,K..pandian etc ..they all have good name on the people)

In the western belt DMK will face a jolt.But definitely they will take a over all lead. Thanks to PMK for their allience with DMK to score over AIADMK in the northern region.

 

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