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All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam

The All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (transl. All India Anna Dravidian Progressive Federation; abbr. AIADMK) is an Indian regional political party with great influence in the state of Tamil Nadu and the union territory of Puducherry. It is a Dravidian party founded by the former chief minister of Tamil Nadu M. G. Ramachandran (M.G.R.) at Madurai on 17 October 1972 as a breakaway faction from the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam after M. Karunanidhi expelled him from the party for demanding an account as the party treasurer.[7] The party is adhering to the policy of socialism and secularism based on the principles of C. N. Annadurai (Anna) collectively coined as Annaism by M.G.R.[8][9] The party has won a seven-time majority in the Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly and has emerged as the most successful political outfit in the state's history. It is currently the main opposition party in the Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly and part of the India-ruling National Democratic Alliance.[10]

All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam
AbbreviationAIADMK
General SecretaryEdappadi K. Palaniswami
Parliamentary ChairpersonM. Thambidurai
Rajya Sabha leaderM. Thambidurai
TreasurerDindigul C. Srinivasan
FounderM. G. Ramachandran
Founded17 October 1972; 50 years ago (1972-10-17)
Split fromDravida Munnetra Kazhagam
HeadquartersPuratchi Thalaivar M.G.R. Maaligai, 226, Avvai Shanmugam Salai,
Royapettah, Chennai – 600014, Tamil Nadu, India.
NewspaperNamadhu Puratchi Thalaivi Amma (Daily journal)[1]
News J (Television channel)[2]
Student wingAIADMK Student Wing
Youth wingM.G.R. Youth Wing
Women's wingAIADMK Women's Wing
Labour wingAnna Trade Union Federation
Ideology
Political positionCentre-left[5]
Colours  Green
ECI StatusState party[6]
AllianceNational Democratic Alliance
Seats in Lok Sabha
0 / 543
Seats in Rajya Sabha
4 / 245
Seats in Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly
63 / 234
Election symbol
Party flag
Website
www.aiadmk.com

From 9 February 1989 to 5 December 2016, the AIADMK was led by the former chief minister of Tamil Nadu J. Jayalalithaa (Amma) as general secretary of the party. She was admired as the Mother of the party by her cadre[11] and was highly popular among the Tamil populace until her death in 2016.[12] From 21 August 2017 to 23 June 2022, the party was led under the dual leadership of the former chief ministers of Tamil Nadu O. Panneerselvam and Edappadi K. Palaniswami as coordinator and joint coordinator respectively.[13][14][15]

From 11 July 2022, the AIADMK is led by the former chief minister of Tamil Nadu Edappadi K. Palaniswami (E.P.S.) as general secretary of the party.[16][17]

The headquarters of the party is called Puratchi Thalaivar M.G.R. Maaligai, which is located at Avvai Shanmugam Salai, Royapettah, Chennai. The building was donated to the party in 1986 by M.G.R.'s wife V. N. Janaki Ramachandran, former chief minister of Tamil Nadu.

Puratchi Thalaivar M.G.R. Maaligai
Headquarters of the party

Ideology and policies

 
Dr. C.N. Annadurai
Ideologue of the party

The AIADMK sought to depoliticize the education policy of the government by not insisting that education be in the Tamil language. Policies of the AIADMK were targeted at the poorer segments of Tamil society—the poor, rickshaw pullers, and destitute women—and centralising the massive noon meal scheme for children.[18][19] There was ambivalence toward the reservation policy and the interests of farmers.[19]

The AIADMK posted an array of welfare schemes targeting the human development index of the state. The AIADMK has schemes listed in the election manifestos covering segments of the population, including fishermen, farmers, and schoolchildren. Until the 2000s, the parties had welfare programmes such as maternity leave, subsidies for public transportation, and educational grants. After the 2000s, the parties started competing at an increasing level for the distribution of consumer goods. The AIADMK government distributed free bicycles to class 11 and 12 students during its tenure of 2001–06. In its manifesto for the 2006 assembly elections, the DMK promised free colour televisions in competition with other parties. The competition continued during the 2011 assembly elections, when both parties announced free laptops for school students and mixers, fans, and blenders for the public.[20]

Culture

  • The party remains firm in its support for the "two language policy," in opposition to center-left demands to have Hindi as the sole lingua franca language, where Tamil and English are the two main languages of Tamil Nadu.[21]
  • The party provided Rs. 1 lakh for temples of local deities in 2016.[22]

Economy

In the spring of 2019, the party lauded the economic policies of the Narendra Modi-led central government, stating that the centre had ushered in economic stability and made the country a "decisive player" in regional economics, and voiced support for the Goods and Services Tax (GST), which had been opposed by their rival the DMK.[23]

Social justice

  • In 1980, the AIADMK under M. G. Ramachandran reversed his decision on economic criteria after the AIADMK faced a close defeat in the Indian general election in Tamil Nadu. He further raised the quota for the backward classes from 31 percent to 50 percent, bringing the total reservation to 68 percent.[24]
  • In 1993, J. Jayalalithaa's AIADMK government passed the Tamil Nadu Backward Classes, Scheduled Castes, and Scheduled Tribes Bill, 1993 in the Assembly (Act 45 of 1994).[25] The bill was sent to the president for his approval. Jayalalithaa's AIADMK government led a cross-party committee of Tamil Nadu politicians to Delhi to meet with the central government. She also demanded that the Tamil Nadu government's Act be placed in the Constitution's Ninth Schedule, ensuring that it cannot be contested in any court.[26] The president's signature was received, confirming the 69 percent reservation for Tamil Nadu.[27]

State water policy

  • In 2006, the AIADMK initiated a case in the Supreme Court to uphold the state's rights on the Mullaperiyar Dam issue. As a result, in May 2014, a Supreme Court verdict allowed the Tamil Nadu State to increase the storage level in the Mullaperiyar Dam to 142 feet from 136 feet and struck down the unconstitutional law enacted by the Government of Kerala in 2006 restricting the storage level to 136 feet.[28] This Supreme Court decision ensured the farmers' and people's livelihoods in the southern districts of Tamil Nadu.[29]
  • In February 2013, the Government of India notified the final award of the Cauvery Water Disputes Tribunal (CWDT) on the directions of the Supreme Court. After 22 years of legal battle, then-Chief Minister Jayalalithaa called it a "tremendous achievement" of her government that the state had received due justice.[30] Then Jayalalithaa said that it was the happiest day of her life and the happiest day for the farmers in Tamil Nadu; she recalled her famous fast-unto-death at Marina Beach in 1993.[31][32][33]

Environment and nature

  • The AIADMK was one of two parties, along with the BJP, to not voice opposition against a ban on cattle slaughter through the national Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act. However, it has sought an exemption in the Act regarding traditional bull fighting;[34] the party supports popular opinion in Tamil Nadu that traditional bull fighting, known as Jallikattu, should not be banned by the centre due to an APEX court ruling against animal cruelty.[35] During the controversy, the party called for animal-rights organisation PETA to be banned.[36]
  • In May 2018, the AIADMK government has ordered the closure of the Sterlite Copper factory in Thoothukkudi in the interest of the people, knowing that the air and water in the city are being heavily polluted by the factory, which has been at the center of violent protests by locals to protect and improve the environment.[37]
  • The AIADMK opposes the building of the Mekedatu Dam, which could reduce water flows into Tamil Nadu and negatively affect quality of life for residents and agriculture.[38]

History

M. G. Ramachandran era (17 October 1972 – 24 December 1987)

 
Dr. M.G. Ramachandran
Founder of the party

The party was founded on 17 October 1972, as Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (ADMK) by M. G. Ramachandran (M.G.R.), a veteran Tamil film star and popular politician. It was set up as a breakaway faction of the DMK led by M. Karunanidhi, then chief minister of Tamil Nadu, owing to personal differences between the two.[39] M.G.R., who wanted to start a new party, then incorporated Anakaputhur Ramalingam into the party, which had registered under the name "ADMK". He then declared, "I joined the party started by an ordinary volunteer" and gave the post of Member of Legislative Council (MLC) to Ramalingam. Later, M.G.R. prefixed the All India (AI) tag to the party's name to save himself from IT raids and protect the party during the Maintenance of Internal Security Act (MISA).[40] Since its inception, the relationship between the AIADMK and DMK has been marked by mutual contempt. M.G.R. used his fan network to build the party cadre; he claims his party recruited more than a million members in the first two months. C. N. Annadurai's ideologue and movie producer turned politician R. M. Veerappan was the key architect in unifying M.G.R. fan clubs and further consolidating the party structure in the 1970s. Other key leaders, such as Nanjil K. Manoharan and S. D. Somasundaram played major roles in consolidation.[41] Pavalar M. Muthusamy was elected the first presidium chairman of the party.[42] The party's first victories were the wins of Maya Thevar in the Dindigul parliamentary bye-election in May 1973[43] and of C. Aranganayagam in the Coimbatore West assembly bye-election a year later. On 2 April 1973, the AIADMK emerged as the third-largest political party in Tamil Nadu, represented by 11 MLAs in the assembly. By January 1976, the AIADMK had emerged as the second-largest political party in Tamil Nadu, with 16 MLAs in the assembly. By supporting the National Emergency between 1975 and 1977, the AIADMK grew close to the Indian National Congress party.

The DMK-led government was dismissed by a central prosecution on corruption charges in 1976. The AIADMK swept to power in 1977, defeating the DMK in the assembly election. M.G.R. was sworn in as the 3rd chief minister of Tamil Nadu on 30 June 1977 and he remained in power until his death on 24 December 1987, winning consecutive assembly elections held in 1980 and 1984.[39] In 1979, the AIADMK became the first Dravidian and regional party to join the Union Cabinet. Sathiavani Muthu and A. Bala Pajanor were the members of parliament joined the short-lived Union Ministry led by then Prime Minister Charan Singh.[40]

The relationship between the AIADMK and the INC slowly became strained. In the 1980 Indian general election, the INC aligned with the DMK, and the alliance won 37 out of the 39 state parliamentary seats. The AIADMK won just two seats.[44] After returning to power, Indira Gandhi dismissed a number of state governments belonging to the opposition parties, including the AIADMK government in Tamil Nadu.

In the 1980 election, with the opposition DMK continuing the electoral alliance with the INC. In a massive reversal of fortunes following the Lok Sabha elections, the AIADMK won a comfortable majority in the state assembly with 129 of 234 seats. M.G.R. was sworn in as chief minister for the second time on 9 June 1980.[44]

In 1984, even with M.G.R.'s failing health and hospitalization, the party won the assembly election in alliance with the INC. Many political historians consider M.G.R.'s persona and charisma at this point in time as "infallible" and a logical continuation of his on-screen "good lad" image, strengthened by his "mythical status" in the minds of the masses. M.G.R. continued to enjoy popular support in his third tenure until his death on 24 December 1987.[45] M.G.R. continued to enjoy popular support in his third tenure until his death on 24 December 1987.[45]

Succession crisis (25 December 1987 – 6 February 1989)

Following M.G.R.'s death, his wife, actress-turned-politician V. N. Janaki Ramachandran, rose to the party's leadership with the support of R. M. Veerappan and 98 MLAs. She served as the state's first female chief minister for 23 days, from 7 January 1988 until the state assembly was suspended on 30 January 1988 and President's Rule was imposed. The party began to crumble due to infighting and broke into two factions, one under Janaki Ramachandran and the other under J. Jayalalithaa, an associate of M.G.R. and another film actress-turned-politician who had starred with M.G.R. The Election Commission of India froze the "Two Leaves" symbol on 17 December 1988.[46] The 1989 assembly election saw the DMK regain power after 13 years in opposition, with M. Karunanidhi returning as the chief minister for the third time. Due to its split, AIADMK suffered heavily in the election, with the Janaki and Jayalalithaa factions winning only 2 and 27 seats, respectively.[45] Following AIADMK's rout in the election, the factions led by Jayalalithaa and Janaki merged under the former's leadership on 10 February 1989, as Janaki decided that politics was not her forte. On 11 February 1989, then Chief Election Commissioner R. V. S. Peri Sastri granted the Two Leaves symbol to the united AIADMK Party led by Jayalalithaa.[47] In the 1989 general election, the AIADMK formed an alliance with the Indian National Congress (INC) and won 37 out of 39 seats in Tamil Nadu. The DMK government was dismissed in 1991 by the central government headed by then-prime minister Chandra Shekhar, an ally of the AIADMK at that time, on charges that the constitutional machinery in the state had broken down.

J. Jayalalithaa era (9 February 1989 – 5 December 2016)

 
Dr. J. Jayalalithaa
Former General Secretary of the party

The AIADMK allied with the Indian National Congress (INC) and swept to power in the 1991 assembly election under the leadership of J. Jayalalithaa, who became the second female and fifth chief minister of the state. Political observers have ascribed the landslide victory to the anti-incumbent wave arising out of the assassination of the former prime minister Rajiv Gandhi[45] by suspected Tamil separatists fighting for a homeland in neighbouring Sri Lanka. The ensuing government was accused of large-scale corruption, but Jayalalithaa held on to power for a full term of five years. In the 1996 assembly election, the AIADMK continued its alliance with the INC but suffered a massive rout, winning only 4 out of the 234 assembly seats, with even Jayalalithaa losing her Bargur constituency.[48][49]

During the parliamentary election in 1998,[48] the AIADMK formed an alliance with the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and Marumalarchi Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (MDMK). In the Atal Bihari Vajpayee-led government between 1998 and 1999,[40] the AIADMK shared power with the BJP, but withdrew support in early 1999, causing the BJP government to fall. Following this, the AIADMK once again allied with the INC.

In the 2001 assembly election, the AIADMK-led alliance, consisting of the Indian National Congress, the Tamil Maanila Congress (Moopanar) (TMC(M)), the Left Front, and the Pattali Makkal Katchi (PMK), regained power, winning 197 seats to the AIADMK's 132.[50] Due to the proceedings in a disproportionate asset case that occurred during her previous tenure, Jayalalithaa was prevented from holding office. On 21 September 2001, O. Panneerselvam, a close confidant of Jayalalithaa, was appointed as the chief minister of Tamil Nadu for the first time. Once the Supreme Court of India overturned Jayalalithaa's conviction and sentence in the case, O. Panneerselvam resigned on 2 March 2002, and Jayalalithaa was again sworn in as chief minister for the third time.[50]

Her second term was not marred by corruption scandals. She took many popular decisions, such as banning lottery tickets, restricting the liquor and sand quarrying businesses to government agencies, and banning tobacco product sales near schools and colleges. She encouraged women to join the state police force by setting up all women's police stations and commissioning 150 women into the elite level police commandos in 2003, a first in India. The women had the same training as men, which included handling weapons, detection and disposal of bombs, driving, horseback riding, and adventure sports.[51] She dispatched a special task force to the Sathyamangalam forests in October 2004 to track down notorious sandalwood smuggler Veerappan. The operation was successful, as he was killed by the task force on 18 October 2004.

However, despite the popular measures taken by the government, in the 2004 general election, the party, in alliance with the BJP again, was humiliated, winning none of the 39 Lok Sabha seats from the state. The Secular Progressive Alliance (SPA), a DMK-led alliance consisting of all the major opposition parties in the state, swept the election.

Later, in the 2006 assembly election, in spite of media speculations of a hung assembly, the AIADMK, contesting with only the support of the MDMK and a few other smaller parties, won 61 seats compared to the DMK's 96 and was pushed out of power by the DMK-led congressional alliance of the PMK and the Left Front. The AIADMK's electoral reversals continued in the 2009 general election. However, the party's performance was better than its debacle in 2004, and it managed to win nine seats.

 
Swearing-in Ceremony of the Council of Ministers headed by Jayalalithaa on 16 May 2011

Following widespread corruption, a price rise, a power cut, and allegations of nepotism against the DMK government, in the 2011 assembly election, the party, in alliance with parties like the left and actor-turned-politician Vijayakant's Desiya Murpokku Dravida Kazhagam (DMDK), swept the polls, winning 202 seats, with the AIADMK winning 150. Jayalalithaa was sworn in as chief minister for the fourth time.[50]

In the union territory of Puducherry, the AIADMK allied with N. Rangasamy's All India N.R. Congress (AINRC) and won the 2011 assembly election, which was held in parallel with the Tamil Nadu assembly election. However, it did not join the newly elected AINRC-led government.

The AIADMK's good electoral performance continued in the 2014 general election as well. It opted not to join any alliance and contested all seats in the state of Tamil Nadu and the union territory of Puducherry on its own. The party won an unprecedented 37 out of the 40 parliamentary constituencies it contested and emerged as the third largest party in the 16th Lok Sabha of the Indian Parliament. It was a massive victory that no other regional political party had ever achieved in the history of general elections.

On 29 August 2014, J. Jayalalithaa was elected as the general secretary of the party for the 7th consecutive term, making her the longest-serving general secretary of the party to date. Earlier, she was elected in the years 1988, 1989, 1993, 1998, 2003,[52] 2008,[53] and 2014.[54] During her longest tenure as general secretary, V. R. Nedunchezhiyan, K. Kalimuthu, Pulamaipithan,[55] C. Ponnaiyan,[56][57] and E. Madhusudhanan[58] served as the presidium chairmen of the party.[42]

On 27 September 2014, Jayalalithaa was convicted in the disproportionate assets case by a Special Court along with her associates V. K. Sasikala, Ilavarasi, and V. N. Sudhakaran and sentenced to four years' simple imprisonment. Jayalalithaa was also fined 100 crore, and her associates were fined 10 crore each. The case had political implications as it was the first time a ruling chief minister had to step down on account of a court sentence.[59]

Due to her resignation, O. Panneerselvam was sworn in as chief minister on 29 September 2014.[60] Jayalalithaa was denied bail by the High Court and moved the Supreme Court for bail. The Supreme Court granted bail on 17 October 2014. On 11 May 2015, the High Court of Karnataka said she was acquitted from that case and was again sworn in as chief minister for the fifth time.[50]

In the 2016 assembly election, running without allies, she swept the polls, winning 136 out of 234 seats. It was the most audacious decision made by her for the massive victory that no other political leader had ever made in the history of Tamil Nadu. On 23 May 2016, Jayalalithaa was sworn in as chief minister for the sixth time.[50]

On 22 September 2016, she was admitted to Apollo Hospital, Chennai, due to fever and dehydration. After a prolonged illness, she died on 5 December 2016, and became the third chief minister in Tamil Nadu to die in office after Anna and her mentor M.G.R.

Expansion beyond Tamil Nadu and Puducherry

Under Jayalalithaa's regime, the party spread beyond Tamil Nadu and Puducherry. State units are established in Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, and Kerala. The party also has a following in places like the Andaman and Nicobar Islands, Maharashtra, the National Capital Territory of Delhi, and Telangana in India, as well as in other countries where Tamil people are present.

In Karnataka, the party had members in the state assembly from 1983 to 2004 and has influence in the Tamil-speaking areas of Bengaluru and Kolar.

In Andhra Pradesh, Kerala, and Maharashtra, the party contested some legislative assembly elections but did not win a single seat in any of the elections.

V. K. Sasikala and T. T. V. Dhinakaran era (31 December 2016 – 17 February 2017)

After Jayalalithaa's death on 5 December 2016, her close aide V. K. Sasikala was selected unanimously as the Acting General Secretary of the party on 31 December 2016.[61][62] On 5 February 2017, she was selected as the leader of the legislative assembly as chief minister. O. Panneerselvam rebelled against Sasikala and reported that he had been compelled to resign as Chief Minister, bringing in a new twist to Tamil Nadu politics. Due to a conviction in the disproportionate assets case against Jayalalithaa, Sasikala was sentenced to 4 years' imprisonment in the Bengaluru Central Prison. Before that, she appointed Edappadi K. Palaniswami as legislative party leader (Chief Minister).

She also appointed her nephew and former treasurer of the party, T. T. V. Dhinakaran, as the deputy general secretary of the AIADMK party. With the support of 123 MLAs, Palaniswami became chief minister of Tamil Nadu.

On 23 March 2017, the Election Commission of India (ECI) gave separate party symbols to the two factions: O. Panneerselvam's faction, known as AIADMK (PURATCHI THALAIVI AMMA), and Edappadi K. Palaniswami's faction, known as AIADMK (AMMA).

By-polls were announced in the Dr. Radhakrishnan Nagar constituency, which was vacated due to Jayalalithaa's death. But the election commission cancelled the by-polls after evidence of large-scale bribery by the ruling AIADMK (AMMA) surfaced. On 17 April 2017, Delhi police registered a case against Dhinakaran, who was also the candidate for AIADMK (AMMA) for the by-election at Dr. Radhakrishnan Nagar, regarding an allegation of attempting to bribe the Election Commission of India for the AIADMK's election symbol. However, the Central District Tis Hazari Courts granted him bail on the grounds that the police had failed to identify the allegedly bribed public official.

T. T. V. Dhinakaran started his party work on 5 August 2017. However, the chief minister, Edappadi K. Palaniswami, had a fallout with Dhinakaran and announced that the appointment of Dinakaran as deputy general secretary was invalid. So he claims, "We are the real AIADMK, and 95% of its cadres are with us."

Expulsion of V. K. Sasikala and T. T. V. Dhinakaran

On 12 September 2017, the AIADMK general council, which had earlier appointed her, cancelled V. K. Sasikala's appointment as general secretary and officially expelled her from the party as a primary member.[63][64]

Earlier on 10 August 2017, T. T. V. Dhinakaran was sacked as deputy general secretary at the meeting headed by Edappadi K. Palaniswami at Puratchi Thalaivar M.G.R. Maaligai in Chennai.[65][64]

After completing her imprisonment at Bengaluru Central Prison, Sasikala filed a case in the City Civil Court IV of Chennai in February 2021, but it upheld her dismissal as the AIADMK general secretary in April 2022.[66]

O. Panneerselvam and Edappadi K. Palaniswami era (21 August 2017 – 23 June 2022)

On 21 August 2017, both O. Panneerselvam and Edappadi K. Palaniswami factions of the AIADMK merged, and O. Panneerselvam was sworn in as the Deputy Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu with the portfolio of Finance and the coordinator of the AIADMK. He also holds portfolios for housing, rural housing, housing development, the slum clearance board, accommodation control, town planning, urban development, and the Chennai Metropolitan Development Authority.[67] On 4 January 2018, O. Panneerselvam was elected Leader of the House in the Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly.

On 12 September 2017, the AIADMK general council decided to cancel V. K. Sasikala's appointment as acting general secretary and officially expel her from the party, though prominent members appointed to party posts by her were allowed to continue discharging their functions. Instead, the late J. Jayalalithaa was named the eternal general secretary of the AIADMK.[63][64]

A day after the merger of two AIADMK factions, on 22 April 2017, 19 MLAs[68] owing allegiance to ousted deputy general secretary T. T. V. Dhinakaran submitted letters to the governor, expressing lack of confidence in Chief Minister Edappadi K. Palaniswami and withdrawing support from the government.[68] 18 out of those 19 MLAs were disqualified from office by the Speaker of the legislative assembly upon recommendation from the AIADMK Chief Whip. After a prolonged legal battle, the Speaker's orders were upheld by the Madras High Court, and bye-elections were held alongside the general parliamentary elections. On 23 November 2017, the Election Commission of India granted the "two leaves" symbol to the O. Panneerselvam and Edappadi K. Palaniswami camp.

On 14 November 2017, the AIADMK launched News J, named after the AIADMK former general secretary J. Jayalalithaa, to replace Jaya TV.[2][69] On 24 February 2018, AIADMK's new mouthpiece, Namadhu Amma, a Tamil daily, was launched, marking the 70th birth anniversary of the AIADMK former general secretary J. Jayalalithaa.[1][70]

Despite the popular measures taken by the government, in the 2019 Lok Sabha election, the party, in alliance with the BJP again, was humiliated, winning one of the 39 Lok Sabha seats from the state. The Secular Progressive Alliance (SPA), a DMK-led alliance consisting of all the major opposition parties in the state, swept the election by winning 38 seats.

Later, in the 2021 assembly election, the AIADMK, which had the support of the same National Democratic Alliance (NDA) and a few other smaller parties, won 66 seats compared to the DMK's 133 seats and was pushed out of power by the DMK-led secular progressive alliance. After the election, the AIADMK emerged as the main party of the opposition in the assembly. On 11 May 2021, party joint coordinator Edappadi K. Palaniswami was recognized as the Leader of the Opposition in the Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly, and on 14 June 2021, party coordinator O. Panneerselvam was recognized as the Deputy Leader of the Opposition in the Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly by M. Appavu, Speaker of the Assembly.

Legal Fight for the party by V. K. Sasikala and T. T. V. Dhinakaran

After that, V. K. Sasikala and T. T. V. Dhinakaran had appealed to the Delhi High Court, which rejected their appeal and said that O. Panneerselvam and Edappadi K. Palaniswami were the original AIADMK.

Following that, T. T. V. Dhinakaran filed an appeal with the Supreme Court of India on March 15, and the bench of the Chief Justice of India dismissed his appeal against the Delhi High Court's decision in favor of the O. Panneerselvam and Edappadi K. Palaniswami camp.

Following this, the General Council passed a resolution removing V. K. Sasikala from the post of General Secretary. V. K. Sasikala and T. T. V. Dhinakaran jointly filed a suit in the High Court challenging the decision of the General Council. Since it was a civil case, the case was transferred to the City Civil Court. During the hearing on 9 April 2021, Dinakaran told the court that he would withdraw from the case as he had started a party called Amma Makkal Munnettra Kazagam. At the same time, Sasikala told the court that she wanted to continue the case. The court dismissed her plea following an interlocutory application from AIADMK Coordinator O. Panneerselvam and Joint Coordinator Edappadi K. Palaniswami.[71]

Tensions with BJP

In June 2022, the AIADMK and BJP were at odds publicly.[72] AIADMK organisation secretary C. Ponnaiyan accused the BJP-led Central government of stealing Tamil Nadu's revenue, as well as blaming AIADMK for election losses, the loss of minority community support, and "anti-Tamil" policies, particularly those affecting students.[73] He also called the alliance an "electoral adjustment," claiming that the BJP was attempting to expand at the cost of the AIADMK in Tamil Nadu and that its ideology is diametrically opposite that of the AIADMK.[74][75] The event reportedly had party cadres reiterating these sentiments, albeit in a lighter tone, and agreeing that the BJP was attempting to wrest control of the state's opposition from the AIADMK.[72]

Leadership tussle between O.P.S. and E.P.S.

On 14 June 2022, citing the party's troubles in the polls, AIADMK district secretaries and other senior party members spoke out to shun the "dual leadership" system and came out publicly in favor of a strong unitary leader to strengthen the organisation.

Supporters of Edappadi K. Palaniswami pushed for the change in the party's leadership structure by staging a political coup against AIADMK Coordinator O. Panneerselvam, who had become weak within the party. According to many sources, of the AIADMK's 75 district secretaries, hardly 10 supported him. Of the party's 66 MLAs, only three were reportedly on O. Panneerselvam's side, and less than 20 percent of the party's general council members were behind him ahead of the crucial general council meeting on 23 June 2022, which was expected to elect the single leadership to the party.[76]

On 23 June 2022, A. Tamil Magan Hussain was unanimously elected as the Presidium Chairman of the party at a general council meeting held at the Shrivaaru Venkataachalapathy Palace in Vanagaram, Chennai.[77][78] On the same day, Presidium Chairman Tamil Magan Hussain announced that the next general council meeting of the party would be held on 11 July 2022.[79][80]

On 30 June 2022, Edappadi K. Palaniswami wrote a letter to O. Panneerselvam asserting the latter ceased to be the party coordinator as the amendments made to the party's bylaw in the December 2020 executive committee meeting were not recognised in the general council meeting held on 23 June 2022.[81][82]

Edappadi K. Palaniswami era (11 July 2022 – Present)

 
Dr. Edappadi K. Palaniswami
General Secretary of the party

On 11 July 2022, an AIADMK general council meeting was held at the Shrivaaru Venkataachalapathy Palace in Vanagaram following the dismissal of a petition by O. Panneerselvam in the Madras High Court.[83] The party general council abolished the dual leadership model, empowered Edappadi K. Palaniswami as the interim general secretary, and called for organisational elections in 4 months.[84] Before the general council meeting, there was violence at the Puratchi Thalaivar M.G.R. Maaligai in Royapettah, where the supporters of Palaniswami and Panneerselvam threw stones, bottles, and plastic chairs at each other and damaged several vehicles nearby.[85] Following this, the Revenue Department of Tamil Nadu sealed the Puratchi Thalaivar M.G.R. Maaligai. Overall, 47 people were injured in the clashes.[86]

The general council meeting made 20 amendments to the AIADMK bylaws, including the removal of rule 20, which had described J. Jayalalithaa as the "eternal general secretary," reviving the post of general secretary, transferring all the powers of the coordinator and joint coordinator to the general secretary, and abolishing the posts of coordinator and joint coordinator. These changes effectively ended the party's dual leadership.[87]

Expulsion of O. Panneerselvam

In the general council meeting held on 11 July 2022, the general council members passed the resolution and expelled the former coordinator O. Panneerselvam,[88] the former deputy coordinator R. Vaithilingam, P. H. Manoj Pandian, and J. C. D. Prabhakar from their respective posts and primary membership in the party for "anti-party" activities.[89][90]

On 11 July 2022, former chief minister of Tamil Nadu Edappadi K. Palaniswami was unanimously elected as the interim general secretary of the party in the general council meeting held at the Shrivaaru Venkatachalapathy Palace in Vanagaram, Chennai.[16] Palaniswami appointed Dindigul C. Srinivasan as the treasurer of the party, replacing O. Panneerselvam.[91] On 19 July 2022, Palaniswami appointed R. B. Udhayakumar as the deputy leader of the opposition in the Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly, replacing Panneerselvam, who declared this in the party's legislative members meeting held on 17 July 2022.[92][93]

On 20 July 2022, the Madras High Court ordered to remove the seal of Puratchi Thalaivar M.G.R. Maaligai and hand over the keys to the interim general secretary, Edappadi K. Palaniswami.[94] It was previously locked and sealed on 11 July 2022.[95][96] On 12 September 2022, the Supreme Court of India dismissed the petition of O. Panneerselvam challenging the Madras High Court's order to handover the keys to Palaniswami.[97]

Legal Fight for the party between Palaniswami and Panneerselvam

The Madras High Court on 17 August 2022 ruled in favor of O. Panneerselvam and declared the AIADMK general council meeting held on 11 July 2022 which had abolished dual leadership as void ab initio. The court called for the restoration of the status quo as it existed on June 23 and has prevented the party from convening any meeting of the executive council or the general council of the party without joint consent from both Palaniswami and Panneerselvam, thus effectively restoring dual leadership. The court cited procedural lapses to declare the general council meeting held on July 11, invalid and found that there was no data to prove Edappadi K. Palaniswami's claim that 95% of the 1.5 crore (15 million) primary party members supported unitary leadership under him.[98][99][100][101]

Edappadi K. Palaniswami appealed the single-judge court order to a larger bench of judges.[102] Following the order, O. Panneerselvam appealed for party unity, which included the splinter AMMK group.[103] Palaniswami dismissed this appeal as a power-hungry move by Panneerselvam and held him responsible for violence at the Puratchi Thalaivar M.G.R. Maaligai.[104]

On 2 September 2022, a division bench of the Madras High Court upheld the decisions of the AIADMK general council meeting held on 11 June 2022, and set aside the previous court order of the single judge in the appeal case of Edappadi K. Palaniswami, thus effectively restoring unitary leadership.[105][17]

Criticism

Being a popular actor, M.G.R.'s fan clubs became a source for electoral mobilization. The head of his fan club, R. M. Veerappan, became a lieutenant, and fellow actress J. Jayalalithaa was groomed as a possible heir apparent.[106] During M.G.R.'s reign, there was a near-collapse of the administrative system, and the state's rank in industrial production fell from third in the country in 1977 to thirteenth in 1987. Populist schemes that consumed two-thirds of the state's budget resulted in long-term economic costs. M.G.R. was running a centralised administration, which took a severe toll on the state administration during his extended period of illness.[107]

Personality cult

J. Jayalalithaa was also accused of creating a personality cult, with fans and party activists calling her "Amma" (meaning "mother" in Tamil). Her face adorned food canteens, pharmacies, salt packets, laptop computers, baby care kits, bottled water, medicine shops, and cement bags. Following her imprisonment on 27 September 2014, her supporters held protests and wept openly. Her replacement, the party's former chief minister, O. Panneerselvam, also wept during his inauguration, with colleagues saying they were in mourning.[108] Due to the centralised leadership of Jayalalithaa, the state of Tamil Nadu experienced policy paralysis, with most legislators and party cadres protesting against her convictions with hunger fasts and road and rail blockades.[109][110] The entire Cabinet would fall into line and bow in front of the helicopter in which it was flying. Members of the party, at all levels, never found it difficult to prostrate before her in full view of the public.[111] Even after her death, the AIADMK leaders continued to prostrate themselves before her tomb in the M.G.R. and Jayalalithaa Memorial Complex.[112][113]

Debt crisis

The overall debt burden of Tamil Nadu is expected to reach more than 5 lakh crore by March 31, 2022, during the AIADMK government.[114] In 2011, the state debt as a percentage of GSDP increased by about 5% during J. Jayalalithaa and the AIADMK's tenure. It was 16.92% in 2011–12. It was 21.83% as of April 2021, during the Edappadi K. Palaniswami government.[115] The opposition criticised the financial mismanagement by the AIADMK, which left 62 thousand per person in the state. The opposition criticised the fact that the entire debt of the state government in the 2006–11 DMK regime was only 44 thousand crore, but the AIADMK regime has a debt of 3.55 lakh crore.[116] The overall debt the AIADMK government left behind as of 31 March 2021, is estimated to be 4,85,502.54 crore, and as of 31 March 2022, it is estimated to be 5,70,189.29 crore.[117]

Electoral performance

Indian general elections

Vote share in Lok Sabha Elections
2019
1.37%
2014
3.31%
2009
1.67%
2004
2.19%
1999
1.93%
1998
1.83%
1996
0.64%
1991
1.62%
1989
1.50%
1984
1.69%
1980
2.36%
1977
2.90%
Lok Sabha Elections
Year Party leader Seats contested Seats won Change in seats Percentage of votes Vote swing Popular vote Result
1977 M. G. Ramachandran 21
18 / 542
  18 2.90%   5,480,378 Government
1980 24
2 / 542
  16 2.36%   0.54% 4,674,064 Opposition
1984 12
12 / 533
  10 1.69%   0.67 3,968,967 Government
1989 J. Jayalalithaa 11
11 / 545
  1 1.50%   0.19 4,518,649 Opposition
1991 11
11 / 545
  1.62%   0.12 4,470,542 Government
1996 10
0 / 545
  11 0.64%   0.98 2,130,286 Lost
1998 23
18 / 545
  18 1.83%   1.19% 6,731,550 Government
1999 29
10 / 545
  8 1.93%   0.10 7,046,953 Opposition
2004 33
0 / 543
  10 2.19%   0.26 8,547,014 Lost
2009 23
9 / 543
  9 1.67%   0.52 6,953,591 Others
2014 40
37 / 543
  28 3.31%   1.64% 18,111,579
2019 O. Panneerselvam and Edappadi K. Palaniswami 22
1 / 543
  36 1.37%   1.94% 8,307,345 Government

State legislative assembly elections

Vote share in Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly Elections
2021
33.29%
2016
40.77%
2011
38.40%
2006
32.64%
2001
31.44%
1996
21.47%
1991
44.39%
1989
21.77%
1984
37.03%
1980
38.75%
1977
30.36%
Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly Elections[118]
Year Party leader Seats contested Seats won Change in seats Percentage of votes Vote swing Popular vote Result
1977 M. G. Ramachandran 200
130 / 234
  130 30.36%   5,194,876 Government
1980 177
129 / 234
  1 38.75%   8.39% 7,303,010
1984 155
132 / 234
  3 37.03%   1.72% 8,030,809
1989 J. Jayalalithaa 202
29 / 234
  103 21.77%   15.26% 5,247,317 Opposition
1991 168
164 / 234
  135 44.39%   22.62% 10,940,966 Government
1996 168
4 / 234
  160 21.47%   22.92% 5,831,383 Others
2001 141
132 / 234
  128 31.44%   9.97% 8,815,387 Government
2006 188
61 / 234
  71 32.64%   1.20% 10,768,559 Opposition
2011 165
150 / 234
  89 38.40%   5.76% 14,150,289 Government
2016 234
136 / 234
  14 41.06%   2.66% 17,617,060
2021 O. Panneerselvam and Edappadi K. Palaniswami 191
66 / 234
  70 33.29%   7.48% 15,391,055 Opposition
Vote share in Puducherry Legislative Assembly Elections
2021
4.14%
2016
16.82%
2011
13.75%
2006
16.04%
2001
12.56%
1996
12.53%
1991
17.34%
1990
18.17%
1985
15.75%
1980
18.60%
1977
30.96%
1974
27.83%
Puducherry Legislative Assembly Elections[119]
Year Party leader Seats contested Seats won Change in seats Percentage of votes Vote swing Popular vote Result
1974 M. G. Ramachandran 21
12 / 30
  12 27.83%   60,812 Government
1977 27
14 / 30
  2 30.96%   3.13% 69,873
1980 18
0 / 30
  14 18.60%   12.36% 45,623 Lost
1985 10
6 / 30
  6 15.75%   2.85% 47,521 Opposition
1990 J. Jayalalithaa 13
3 / 30
  3 18.17%   2.42% 76,337
1991 10
6 / 30
  3 17.34%   0.83% 67,792 Government
1996 10
3 / 30
  3 12.53%   4.81% 57,678 Opposition
2001 20
3 / 30
  12.56%   0.03% 59,926 Government
2006 18
3 / 30
  16.04%   3.48% 90,699 Others
2011 10
5 / 30
  2 13.75%   2.29% 95,960 Government
2016 30
4 / 30
  1 16.82%   3.07% 134,597 Opposition
2021 O. Panneerselvam and Edappadi K. Palaniswami 5
0 / 30
  4 4.14%   12.68% 34,623 Lost
Vote share in Karnataka Legislative Assembly Elections
2018
0.01%
2013
0.03%
2008
0.03%
2004
0.07%
1999
0.18%
1994
0.24%
1989
0.18%
1983
0.13%
1978
0.18%
Karnataka Legislative Assembly Elections[120]
Year Party leader Seats contested Seats won Change in seats Percentage of votes Vote swing Popular vote Result
1978 M. G. Ramachandran 7   0.18%   22,310 Lost
1983 1   1 0.13%   0.05% 16,234 Government
1989 J. Jayalalithaa 1   0.18%   0.05% 32,928
1994 4   0.24%   0.06% 50,696 Opposition
1999 13   0.18%   0.06% 39,865 Government
2004 2   1 0.07%   0.11% 16,737 Lost
2008 7   0.03%   0.04% 9,088
2013 5   0.03%   10,280
2018 O. Panneerselvam and Edappadi K. Palaniswami 3   0.01%   0.02% 2,072
Vote share in Kerala Legislative Assembly Elections
2021
0.05%
2016
0.17%
2011
0.01%
2006
0.12%
1980
0.00%
1977
0.02%
Kerala Legislative Assembly Elections[121]
Year Party leader Seats contested Seats won Change in seats Percentage of votes Vote swing Popular vote Result
1977 M. G. Ramachandran 2   0.02%   2,114 Lost
1980 1   0.00%   0.02% 224
2006 J. Jayalalithaa 29   0.12%   0.12% 19,078
2011 4   0.01%   0.11% 2,448
2016 7   0.17%   0.16% 33,440
2021 O. Panneerselvam and Edappadi K. Palaniswami 1   0.05%   0.12% 10,376
Vote share in Andhra Pradesh Legislative Assembly Elections
1999
0.02%
1994
0.05%
1978
0.19%
Andhra Pradesh Legislative Assembly Elections[122]
Year Party leader Seats contested Seats won Change in seats Percentage of votes Vote swing Popular vote Result
1978 M. G. Ramachandran 9   0.19%   38,691 Lost
1994 J. Jayalalithaa 2   0.05%   0.14% 14,251
1999 5   0.02%   0.03% 7,281
Vote share in Maharashtra Legislative Assembly Elections
2009
0.01%
1999
0.01%
Maharashtra Legislative Assembly Elections[123]
Year Party leader Seats contested Seats won Change in seats Percentage of votes Vote swing Popular vote Result
1999 J. Jayalalithaa 3   0.01%   3,711 Lost
2009 2   0.01%   2,587

Current office bearers and prominent members

Member Position in Government Party Position
Edappadi K. Palaniswami Interim General Secretary
K. P. Munusamy Deputy General Secretary
Natham R. Viswanathan Deputy General Secretary
A. Tamil Magan Hussain
  • Former Chairperson of Tamil Nadu Waqf Board
Presidium Chairman
Dindigul C. Srinivasan Treasurer
S. P. Velumani Puratchi Thalaivar M.G.R. Maaligai Secretary
M. Thambidurai Rajya Sabha Leader and Propaganda Secretary
R. B. Udhayakumar Puratchi Thalaivi Amma Federation Secretary
S. Ravi Ranipet District Secretary
Kadambur C. Raju Thoothukkudi North District Secretary
K. P. Anbalagan Dharmapuri District Secretary
Agri S.S. Krishnamoorthy Agriculture Wing Secretary
C. Ponnaiyan
  • Former Minister for Finance of Tamil Nadu
All World M.G.R. Forum Secretary
Pollachi V. Jayaraman Election Wing Secretary
B. Valarmathi
  • Former Minister for Social Welfare and Nutritious Noon Meal Programme of Tamil Nadu
Women's Wing Secretary
A. Justin Selvaraj   Minority Welfare Wing Secretary
Thadi Ma. Rasu   Anna Trade Union Federation President
P. Venugopal Medical Wing Secretary
V. S. Sethuraman   Advocate Wing President
Vaigaichelvan
  • Former Minister for School Education of Tamil Nadu
Literature Wing Secretary
R. Kamalakannan   Anna Trade Union Federation Secretary
K. Sankaradas   Non-organizational Driver Wing Secretary
S. R. Vijayakumar Student Wing Secretary
N. R. Sivapathi
  • Former Minister for Animal Husbandry of Tamil Nadu
M.G.R. Youth Wing Secretary
V. P. B. Paramasivam Youth Brigade Secretary
Singai G. Ramachandran   IT Wing Secretary
State Unit Secretaries
A. Anbalagan Puducherry (East) Unit Secretary
S. D. Kumar   Karnataka Unit Secretary
G. Shobakumar   Kerala Unit Secretary

List of party leaders

Presidents

No. Portrait Name
(Birth–Death)
Term in Office
Assumed Office Left Office Time in Office
1   M. G. Ramachandran
(1917–1987)
17 October 1972 24 December 1987 15 years, 68 days

General Secretaries

No. Portrait Name
(Birth–Death)
Term in Office
Assumed Office Left Office Time in Office
1   M. G. Ramachandran
(1917–1987)
17 October 1972 22 June 1978 6 years, 316 days
17 October 1986 24 December 1987
2   V. R. Nedunchezhiyan
(1920–2000)
23 June 1978 10 June 1980 3 years, 33 days
25 December 1987 8 February 1989
3   P. U. Shanmugam
(1924–2007)
11 June 1980 13 March 1985 4 years, 275 days
4   S. Raghavanandam
(1917–1999)
14 March 1985 16 October 1986 1 year, 216 days
5   J. Jayalalithaa
(1948–2016)
9 February 1989 5 December 2016 27 years, 300 days
Acting   V. K. Sasikala
(1954–)
31 December 2016 17 February 2017 48 days
Interim   Edappadi K. Palaniswami
(1954–)
11 July 2022 Incumbent 192 days

Coordinators

No. Portrait Name
(Birth–Death)
Term in Office
Assumed Office Left Office Time in Office
1   Coordinator
O. Panneerselvam
(1951–)
21 August 2017 23 June 2022 4 years, 306 days
  Joint Coordinator
Edappadi K. Palaniswami
(1954–)

Legislative leaders

List of union cabinet ministers

No. Portrait Name
(Birth–Death)
Portfolio Term in Office Constituency
(House)
Prime Minister
Assumed Office Left Office Time in Office
1   Sathiavani Muthu
(1923–1999)
Minister of Social Welfare 19 August 1979 23 December 1979 126 days Tamil Nadu
(Rajya Sabha)
Charan Singh
2   A. Bala Pajanor
(1935–2013)
Minister of Petroleum, Chemicals and Fertilizers Puducherry
(Lok Sabha)
3   R. Muthiah
(1945–2022)
Minister of Surface Transport 19 March 1998 8 April 1998 20 days Periyakulam
(Lok Sabha)
Atal Bihari Vajpayee
4   M. Thambidurai
(1947–)
Minister of Law, Justice and Company Affairs 19 March 1998 8 April 1999 1 year, 20 days Karur
(Lok Sabha)
Minister of Surface Transport 8 April 1998 1 year

List of chief ministers

Chief Ministers of Tamil Nadu

No. Portrait Name
(Birth–Death)
Term in Office Assembly
(Election)
Constituency Ministry
Assumed Office Left Office Time in Office
1   M. G. Ramachandran
(1917–1987)
30 June 1977 17 February 1980 10 years, 65 days 6th
(1977 election)
Aruppukkottai Ramachandran I
9 June 1980 9 February 1985 7th
(1980 election)
Madurai West Ramachandran II
10 February 1985 24 December 1987 8th
(1984 election)
Andipatti Ramachandran III
Acting   V. R. Nedunchezhiyan
(1920–2000)
24 December 1987 7 January 1988 14 days Athoor Nedunchezhiyan II
2   V. N. Janaki Ramachandran
(1924–1996)
7 January 1988 30 January 1988 23 days Did not contest Janaki
3   J. Jayalalithaa
(1948–2016)
24 June 1991 12 May 1996 14 years, 124 days 10th
(1991 election)
Bargur Jayalalithaa I
14 May 2001 21 September 2001 12th
(2001 election)
Did not contest Jayalalithaa II
2 March 2002 12 May 2006 Andipatti Jayalalithaa III
16 May 2011 27 September 2014 14th
(2011 election)
Srirangam Jayalalithaa IV
23 May 2015 22 May 2016 Dr. Radhakrishnan Nagar Jayalalithaa V
23 May 2016 5 December 2016 15th
(2016 election)
Jayalalithaa VI
4   O. Panneerselvam
(1951–)
21 September 2001 2 March 2002 1 year, 105 days 12th
(2001 election)
Periyakulam Panneerselvam I
28 September 2014 23 May 2015 14th
(2011 election)
Bodinayakanur Panneerselvam II
6 December 2016 15 February 2017 15th
(2016 election)
Panneerselvam III
5   Edappadi K. Palaniswami
(1954–)
16 February 2017 6 May 2021 4 years, 79 days Edappadi Palaniswami

Chief Minister of Puducherry

No. Portrait Name
(Birth–Death)
Term in Office Assembly
(Election)
Constituency Ministry
Assumed Office Left Office Time in Office
1   S. Ramassamy
(1939–2017)
6 March 1974 28 March 1974 1 year, 155 days 4th
(1974 election)
Karaikal South Ramassamy I
2 July 1977 12 November 1978 5th
(1977 election)
Ramassamy II

List of deputy chief ministers

Deputy Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu

No. Portrait Name
(Birth–Death)
Term in Office Assembly
(Election)
Constituency Chief Minister
Assumed Office Left Office Time in Office
1   O. Panneerselvam
(1951–)
21 August 2017 6 May 2021 3 years, 258 days 15th
(2016 election)
Bodinayakanur Edappadi K. Palaniswami

List of deputy speakers of the Lok Sabha

No. Portrait Name
(Birth–Death)
Term in Office Lok Sabha
(Election)
Constituency Speaker
Assumed Office Left Office Time in Office
1   M. Thambidurai
(1947–)
22 January 1985 27 November 1989 9 years, 229 days 8th
(1984 election)
Dharmapuri Balram Jakhar
13 August 2014 25 May 2019 16th
(2014 election)
Karur Sumitra Mahajan

List of union ministers of state

No. Portrait Name
(Birth–Death)
Portfolio Term in Office Constituency
(House)
Cabinet Minister Prime Minister
Assumed Office Left Office Time in Office
1   R. K. Kumar
(1942–1999)
Minister of State for Parliamentary Affairs 19 March 1998 22 May 1998 64 days Tamil Nadu
(Rajya Sabha)
Madan Lal Khurana Atal Bihari Vajpayee
Minister of State for Finance 20 March 1998 63 days Yashwant Sinha
2   Kadambur M. R. Janarthanan
(1929–2020)
Minister of State for Personnel, Public Grievances and Pensions 20 March 1998 8 April 1999 1 year, 19 days Tirunelveli
(Lok Sabha)
Atal Bihari Vajpayee
Minister of State for Finance 22 May 1998 321 days Yashwant Sinha

List of speakers

Speakers of the Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly

No. Portrait Name
(Birth–Death)
Term in Office Assembly
(Election)
Constituency
Assumed Office Left Office Time in Office
1   Munu Adhi
(1926–2005)
6 July 1977 18 June 1980 2 years, 348 days 6th
(1977 election)
Tambaram
2   K. Rajaram
(1926–2008)
21 June 1980 24 February 1985 4 years, 248 days 7th
(1980 election)
Panamarathupatti
3   P. H. Pandian
(1945–2020)
27 February 1985 5 February 1989 3 years, 344 days 8th
(1984 election)
Cheranmadevi
4   R. Muthiah
(1945–2022)
3 July 1991 21 May 1996 4 years, 323 days 10th
(1991 election)
Sedapatti
5   K. Kalimuthu
(1942–2006)
24 May 2001 1 February 2006 4 years, 253 days 12th
(2001 election)
Thirumangalam
6   D. Jayakumar
(1960–)
27 May 2011 29 September 2012 1 year, 125 days 14th
(2011 election)
Royapuram
7   P. Dhanapal
(1951–)
10 October 2012 24 May 2016 8 years, 196 days Rasipuram
3 June 2016 3 May 2021 15th
(2016 election)
Avanashi

Speakers of the Puducherry Legislative Assembly

No. Portrait Name
(Birth–Death)
Term in Office Assembly
(Election)
Constituency
Assumed Office Left Office Time in Office
1   S. Pakkiam
(unknown–unknown)
26 March 1974 28 March 1974 2 days 4th
(1974 election)
Bussy

List of deputy speakers

Deputy speakers of the Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly

No. Portrait Name
(Birth–Death)
Term in Office Assembly
(Election)
Constituency Speaker
Assumed Office Left Office Time in Office
1   Su. Thirunavukkarasar
(1949–)
6 July 1977 17 February 1980 2 years, 226 days 6th
(1977 election)
Arantangi Munu Adhi
2   P. H. Pandian
(1945–2020)
21 June 1980 15 November 1984 4 years, 147 days 7th
(1980 election)
Cheranmadevi K. Rajaram
3   V. P. Balasubramanian
(1946–)
27 February 1985 30 January 1988 2 years, 337 days 8th
(1984 election)
Vedasandur P. H. Pandian
4   K. Ponnusamy
(Unknown–)
3 July 1991 16 May 1993 1 year, 317 days 10th
(1991 election)
Marungapuri R. Muthiah
5   S. Gandhirajan
(1951–)
27 October 1993 13 May 1996 2 years, 199 days Vedasandur
6   A. Arunachalam
(Unknown–)
24 May 2001 12 May 2006 4 years, 353 days 12th
(2001 election)
Varahur K. Kalimuthu
7   P. Dhanapal
(1951–)
27 May 2011 9 October 2012 1 year, 135 days 14th
(2011 election)
Rasipuram D. Jayakumar
8   Pollachi V. Jayaraman
(1952–)
29 October 2012 21 May 2016 8 years, 174 days Udumalaipettai P. Dhanapal
3 June 2016 3 May 2021 15th
(2016 election)
Pollachi

List of leaders of the opposition

Leaders of the Opposition in the Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly

No. Portrait Name
(Birth–Death)
Term in Office Assembly
(Election)
Constituency
Assumed Office Left Office Time in Office
1   J. Jayalalithaa
(1948–2016)
9 February 1989 1 December 1989 5 years, 280 days 9th
(1989 election)
Bodinayakanur
29 May 2006 14 May 2011 13th
(2006 election)
Andipatti
2   S. R. Eradha
(1934–2020)
1 December 1989 19 January 1991 1 year, 49 days 9th
(1989 election)
Madurai East
3   O. Panneerselvam
(1951–)
19 May 2006 28 May 2006 9 days 13th
(2006 election)
Periyakulam
4   Edappadi K. Palaniswami
(1954–)
11 May 2021 Incumbent 1 year, 253 days 16th
(2021 election)
Edappadi

Leaders of the Opposition in the Puducherry Legislative Assembly

No. Portrait Name
(Birth–Death)
Term in Office Assembly
(Election)
Constituency
Assumed Office Left Office Time in Office
1   P. K. Loganathan
(1938–2013)
16 March 1985 4 March 1990 4 years, 353 days 7th
(1985 election)
Oupalam
2   V. M. C. V. Ganapathy
(1960–)
4 July 1991 13 May 1996 4 years, 314 days 9th
(1991 election)
Neravy T. R. Pattinam

List of deputy leaders of the opposition

Deputy leaders of the Opposition in the Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly

No. Portrait Name
(Birth–Death)
Term in Office Assembly
(Election)
Constituency Leader of the Opposition
Assumed Office Left Office Time in Office
1   Su. Thirunavukkarasar
(1949–)
9 February 1989 19 January 1991 1 year, 344 days 9th
(1989 election)
Aranthangi J. Jayalalithaa

S. R. Eradha

2   K. A. Sengottaiyan
(1948–)
19 May 2006 28 May 2006 9 days 13th
(2006 election)
Gobichettipalayam O. Panneerselvam
3   O. Panneerselvam
(1951–)
29 May 2006 14 May 2011 6 years, 12 days Periyakulam J. Jayalalithaa
14 June 2021 11 July 2022 16th
(2021 election)
Bodinayakanur Edappadi K. Palaniswami
4   R. B. Udhayakumar
(1973–)
19 July 2022 Incumbent 184 days Thirumangalam

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "AIADMK mouthpiece to be launched on February 24". thehindu. 22 February 2018. Retrieved 23 February 2018.
  2. ^ a b "AIADMK Launches Its Own News Channel Named After Jayalalithaa". outlookindia. 13 September 2018. Retrieved 13 September 2018.
  3. ^ Price, P. (1996). Revolution and Rank in Tamil Nationalism. The Journal of Asian Studies, 55(2), 359-383. doi:10.2307/2943363
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External links

  • Official website  
  • AIADMK on YouTube
  • AIADMK on Twitter
  • AIADMK on Facebook

india, anna, dravida, munnetra, kazhagam, transl, india, anna, dravidian, progressive, federation, abbr, aiadmk, indian, regional, political, party, with, great, influence, state, tamil, nadu, union, territory, puducherry, dravidian, party, founded, former, ch. The All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam transl All India Anna Dravidian Progressive Federation abbr AIADMK is an Indian regional political party with great influence in the state of Tamil Nadu and the union territory of Puducherry It is a Dravidian party founded by the former chief minister of Tamil Nadu M G Ramachandran M G R at Madurai on 17 October 1972 as a breakaway faction from the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam after M Karunanidhi expelled him from the party for demanding an account as the party treasurer 7 The party is adhering to the policy of socialism and secularism based on the principles of C N Annadurai Anna collectively coined as Annaism by M G R 8 9 The party has won a seven time majority in the Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly and has emerged as the most successful political outfit in the state s history It is currently the main opposition party in the Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly and part of the India ruling National Democratic Alliance 10 All India Anna Dravida Munnetra KazhagamAbbreviationAIADMKGeneral SecretaryEdappadi K PalaniswamiParliamentary ChairpersonM ThambiduraiRajya Sabha leaderM ThambiduraiTreasurerDindigul C SrinivasanFounderM G RamachandranFounded17 October 1972 50 years ago 1972 10 17 Split fromDravida Munnetra KazhagamHeadquartersPuratchi Thalaivar M G R Maaligai 226 Avvai Shanmugam Salai Royapettah Chennai 600014 Tamil Nadu India NewspaperNamadhu Puratchi Thalaivi Amma Daily journal 1 News J Television channel 2 Student wingAIADMK Student WingYouth wingM G R Youth WingWomen s wingAIADMK Women s WingLabour wingAnna Trade Union FederationIdeologyPopulismSocialismSecularismDravidianismTamil nationalism 3 4 Political positionCentre left 5 Colours GreenECI StatusState party 6 AllianceNational Democratic AllianceSeats in Lok Sabha0 543Seats in Rajya Sabha4 245Seats in Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly63 234Election symbolParty flagWebsitewww aiadmk comPolitics of IndiaPolitical partiesElectionsFrom 9 February 1989 to 5 December 2016 the AIADMK was led by the former chief minister of Tamil Nadu J Jayalalithaa Amma as general secretary of the party She was admired as the Mother of the party by her cadre 11 and was highly popular among the Tamil populace until her death in 2016 12 From 21 August 2017 to 23 June 2022 the party was led under the dual leadership of the former chief ministers of Tamil Nadu O Panneerselvam and Edappadi K Palaniswami as coordinator and joint coordinator respectively 13 14 15 From 11 July 2022 the AIADMK is led by the former chief minister of Tamil Nadu Edappadi K Palaniswami E P S as general secretary of the party 16 17 The headquarters of the party is called Puratchi Thalaivar M G R Maaligai which is located at Avvai Shanmugam Salai Royapettah Chennai The building was donated to the party in 1986 by M G R s wife V N Janaki Ramachandran former chief minister of Tamil Nadu Puratchi Thalaivar M G R MaaligaiHeadquarters of the party Contents 1 Ideology and policies 1 1 Culture 1 2 Economy 1 3 Social justice 1 4 State water policy 1 5 Environment and nature 2 History 2 1 M G Ramachandran era 17 October 1972 24 December 1987 2 1 1 Succession crisis 25 December 1987 6 February 1989 2 2 J Jayalalithaa era 9 February 1989 5 December 2016 2 2 1 Expansion beyond Tamil Nadu and Puducherry 2 3 V K Sasikala and T T V Dhinakaran era 31 December 2016 17 February 2017 2 3 1 Expulsion of V K Sasikala and T T V Dhinakaran 2 4 O Panneerselvam and Edappadi K Palaniswami era 21 August 2017 23 June 2022 2 4 1 Legal Fight for the party by V K Sasikala and T T V Dhinakaran 2 4 2 Tensions with BJP 2 4 3 Leadership tussle between O P S and E P S 2 5 Edappadi K Palaniswami era 11 July 2022 Present 2 5 1 Expulsion of O Panneerselvam 2 5 2 Legal Fight for the party between Palaniswami and Panneerselvam 3 Criticism 3 1 Personality cult 3 2 Debt crisis 4 Electoral performance 4 1 Indian general elections 4 2 State legislative assembly elections 5 Current office bearers and prominent members 6 List of party leaders 6 1 Presidents 6 2 General Secretaries 6 3 Coordinators 7 Legislative leaders 7 1 List of union cabinet ministers 7 2 List of chief ministers 7 2 1 Chief Ministers of Tamil Nadu 7 2 2 Chief Minister of Puducherry 7 3 List of deputy chief ministers 7 3 1 Deputy Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu 7 4 List of deputy speakers of the Lok Sabha 7 5 List of union ministers of state 7 6 List of speakers 7 6 1 Speakers of the Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly 7 6 2 Speakers of the Puducherry Legislative Assembly 7 7 List of deputy speakers 7 7 1 Deputy speakers of the Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly 7 8 List of leaders of the opposition 7 8 1 Leaders of the Opposition in the Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly 7 8 2 Leaders of the Opposition in the Puducherry Legislative Assembly 7 9 List of deputy leaders of the opposition 7 9 1 Deputy leaders of the Opposition in the Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksIdeology and policies Edit Dr C N AnnaduraiIdeologue of the party The AIADMK sought to depoliticize the education policy of the government by not insisting that education be in the Tamil language Policies of the AIADMK were targeted at the poorer segments of Tamil society the poor rickshaw pullers and destitute women and centralising the massive noon meal scheme for children 18 19 There was ambivalence toward the reservation policy and the interests of farmers 19 The AIADMK posted an array of welfare schemes targeting the human development index of the state The AIADMK has schemes listed in the election manifestos covering segments of the population including fishermen farmers and schoolchildren Until the 2000s the parties had welfare programmes such as maternity leave subsidies for public transportation and educational grants After the 2000s the parties started competing at an increasing level for the distribution of consumer goods The AIADMK government distributed free bicycles to class 11 and 12 students during its tenure of 2001 06 In its manifesto for the 2006 assembly elections the DMK promised free colour televisions in competition with other parties The competition continued during the 2011 assembly elections when both parties announced free laptops for school students and mixers fans and blenders for the public 20 Culture Edit The party remains firm in its support for the two language policy in opposition to center left demands to have Hindi as the sole lingua franca language where Tamil and English are the two main languages of Tamil Nadu 21 The party provided Rs 1 lakh for temples of local deities in 2016 22 Economy Edit In the spring of 2019 the party lauded the economic policies of the Narendra Modi led central government stating that the centre had ushered in economic stability and made the country a decisive player in regional economics and voiced support for the Goods and Services Tax GST which had been opposed by their rival the DMK 23 Social justice Edit In 1980 the AIADMK under M G Ramachandran reversed his decision on economic criteria after the AIADMK faced a close defeat in the Indian general election in Tamil Nadu He further raised the quota for the backward classes from 31 percent to 50 percent bringing the total reservation to 68 percent 24 In 1993 J Jayalalithaa s AIADMK government passed the Tamil Nadu Backward Classes Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes Bill 1993 in the Assembly Act 45 of 1994 25 The bill was sent to the president for his approval Jayalalithaa s AIADMK government led a cross party committee of Tamil Nadu politicians to Delhi to meet with the central government She also demanded that the Tamil Nadu government s Act be placed in the Constitution s Ninth Schedule ensuring that it cannot be contested in any court 26 The president s signature was received confirming the 69 percent reservation for Tamil Nadu 27 State water policy Edit In 2006 the AIADMK initiated a case in the Supreme Court to uphold the state s rights on the Mullaperiyar Dam issue As a result in May 2014 a Supreme Court verdict allowed the Tamil Nadu State to increase the storage level in the Mullaperiyar Dam to 142 feet from 136 feet and struck down the unconstitutional law enacted by the Government of Kerala in 2006 restricting the storage level to 136 feet 28 This Supreme Court decision ensured the farmers and people s livelihoods in the southern districts of Tamil Nadu 29 In February 2013 the Government of India notified the final award of the Cauvery Water Disputes Tribunal CWDT on the directions of the Supreme Court After 22 years of legal battle then Chief Minister Jayalalithaa called it a tremendous achievement of her government that the state had received due justice 30 Then Jayalalithaa said that it was the happiest day of her life and the happiest day for the farmers in Tamil Nadu she recalled her famous fast unto death at Marina Beach in 1993 31 32 33 Environment and nature Edit The AIADMK was one of two parties along with the BJP to not voice opposition against a ban on cattle slaughter through the national Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act However it has sought an exemption in the Act regarding traditional bull fighting 34 the party supports popular opinion in Tamil Nadu that traditional bull fighting known as Jallikattu should not be banned by the centre due to an APEX court ruling against animal cruelty 35 During the controversy the party called for animal rights organisation PETA to be banned 36 In May 2018 the AIADMK government has ordered the closure of the Sterlite Copper factory in Thoothukkudi in the interest of the people knowing that the air and water in the city are being heavily polluted by the factory which has been at the center of violent protests by locals to protect and improve the environment 37 The AIADMK opposes the building of the Mekedatu Dam which could reduce water flows into Tamil Nadu and negatively affect quality of life for residents and agriculture 38 History EditM G Ramachandran era 17 October 1972 24 December 1987 Edit Dr M G RamachandranFounder of the party The party was founded on 17 October 1972 as Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam ADMK by M G Ramachandran M G R a veteran Tamil film star and popular politician It was set up as a breakaway faction of the DMK led by M Karunanidhi then chief minister of Tamil Nadu owing to personal differences between the two 39 M G R who wanted to start a new party then incorporated Anakaputhur Ramalingam into the party which had registered under the name ADMK He then declared I joined the party started by an ordinary volunteer and gave the post of Member of Legislative Council MLC to Ramalingam Later M G R prefixed the All India AI tag to the party s name to save himself from IT raids and protect the party during the Maintenance of Internal Security Act MISA 40 Since its inception the relationship between the AIADMK and DMK has been marked by mutual contempt M G R used his fan network to build the party cadre he claims his party recruited more than a million members in the first two months C N Annadurai s ideologue and movie producer turned politician R M Veerappan was the key architect in unifying M G R fan clubs and further consolidating the party structure in the 1970s Other key leaders such as Nanjil K Manoharan and S D Somasundaram played major roles in consolidation 41 Pavalar M Muthusamy was elected the first presidium chairman of the party 42 The party s first victories were the wins of Maya Thevar in the Dindigul parliamentary bye election in May 1973 43 and of C Aranganayagam in the Coimbatore West assembly bye election a year later On 2 April 1973 the AIADMK emerged as the third largest political party in Tamil Nadu represented by 11 MLAs in the assembly By January 1976 the AIADMK had emerged as the second largest political party in Tamil Nadu with 16 MLAs in the assembly By supporting the National Emergency between 1975 and 1977 the AIADMK grew close to the Indian National Congress party The DMK led government was dismissed by a central prosecution on corruption charges in 1976 The AIADMK swept to power in 1977 defeating the DMK in the assembly election M G R was sworn in as the 3rd chief minister of Tamil Nadu on 30 June 1977 and he remained in power until his death on 24 December 1987 winning consecutive assembly elections held in 1980 and 1984 39 In 1979 the AIADMK became the first Dravidian and regional party to join the Union Cabinet Sathiavani Muthu and A Bala Pajanor were the members of parliament joined the short lived Union Ministry led by then Prime Minister Charan Singh 40 The relationship between the AIADMK and the INC slowly became strained In the 1980 Indian general election the INC aligned with the DMK and the alliance won 37 out of the 39 state parliamentary seats The AIADMK won just two seats 44 After returning to power Indira Gandhi dismissed a number of state governments belonging to the opposition parties including the AIADMK government in Tamil Nadu In the 1980 election with the opposition DMK continuing the electoral alliance with the INC In a massive reversal of fortunes following the Lok Sabha elections the AIADMK won a comfortable majority in the state assembly with 129 of 234 seats M G R was sworn in as chief minister for the second time on 9 June 1980 44 In 1984 even with M G R s failing health and hospitalization the party won the assembly election in alliance with the INC Many political historians consider M G R s persona and charisma at this point in time as infallible and a logical continuation of his on screen good lad image strengthened by his mythical status in the minds of the masses M G R continued to enjoy popular support in his third tenure until his death on 24 December 1987 45 M G R continued to enjoy popular support in his third tenure until his death on 24 December 1987 45 Succession crisis 25 December 1987 6 February 1989 Edit Following M G R s death his wife actress turned politician V N Janaki Ramachandran rose to the party s leadership with the support of R M Veerappan and 98 MLAs She served as the state s first female chief minister for 23 days from 7 January 1988 until the state assembly was suspended on 30 January 1988 and President s Rule was imposed The party began to crumble due to infighting and broke into two factions one under Janaki Ramachandran and the other under J Jayalalithaa an associate of M G R and another film actress turned politician who had starred with M G R The Election Commission of India froze the Two Leaves symbol on 17 December 1988 46 The 1989 assembly election saw the DMK regain power after 13 years in opposition with M Karunanidhi returning as the chief minister for the third time Due to its split AIADMK suffered heavily in the election with the Janaki and Jayalalithaa factions winning only 2 and 27 seats respectively 45 Following AIADMK s rout in the election the factions led by Jayalalithaa and Janaki merged under the former s leadership on 10 February 1989 as Janaki decided that politics was not her forte On 11 February 1989 then Chief Election Commissioner R V S Peri Sastri granted the Two Leaves symbol to the united AIADMK Party led by Jayalalithaa 47 In the 1989 general election the AIADMK formed an alliance with the Indian National Congress INC and won 37 out of 39 seats in Tamil Nadu The DMK government was dismissed in 1991 by the central government headed by then prime minister Chandra Shekhar an ally of the AIADMK at that time on charges that the constitutional machinery in the state had broken down J Jayalalithaa era 9 February 1989 5 December 2016 Edit Dr J JayalalithaaFormer General Secretary of the party The AIADMK allied with the Indian National Congress INC and swept to power in the 1991 assembly election under the leadership of J Jayalalithaa who became the second female and fifth chief minister of the state Political observers have ascribed the landslide victory to the anti incumbent wave arising out of the assassination of the former prime minister Rajiv Gandhi 45 by suspected Tamil separatists fighting for a homeland in neighbouring Sri Lanka The ensuing government was accused of large scale corruption but Jayalalithaa held on to power for a full term of five years In the 1996 assembly election the AIADMK continued its alliance with the INC but suffered a massive rout winning only 4 out of the 234 assembly seats with even Jayalalithaa losing her Bargur constituency 48 49 During the parliamentary election in 1998 48 the AIADMK formed an alliance with the Bharatiya Janata Party BJP and Marumalarchi Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam MDMK In the Atal Bihari Vajpayee led government between 1998 and 1999 40 the AIADMK shared power with the BJP but withdrew support in early 1999 causing the BJP government to fall Following this the AIADMK once again allied with the INC In the 2001 assembly election the AIADMK led alliance consisting of the Indian National Congress the Tamil Maanila Congress Moopanar TMC M the Left Front and the Pattali Makkal Katchi PMK regained power winning 197 seats to the AIADMK s 132 50 Due to the proceedings in a disproportionate asset case that occurred during her previous tenure Jayalalithaa was prevented from holding office On 21 September 2001 O Panneerselvam a close confidant of Jayalalithaa was appointed as the chief minister of Tamil Nadu for the first time Once the Supreme Court of India overturned Jayalalithaa s conviction and sentence in the case O Panneerselvam resigned on 2 March 2002 and Jayalalithaa was again sworn in as chief minister for the third time 50 Her second term was not marred by corruption scandals She took many popular decisions such as banning lottery tickets restricting the liquor and sand quarrying businesses to government agencies and banning tobacco product sales near schools and colleges She encouraged women to join the state police force by setting up all women s police stations and commissioning 150 women into the elite level police commandos in 2003 a first in India The women had the same training as men which included handling weapons detection and disposal of bombs driving horseback riding and adventure sports 51 She dispatched a special task force to the Sathyamangalam forests in October 2004 to track down notorious sandalwood smuggler Veerappan The operation was successful as he was killed by the task force on 18 October 2004 However despite the popular measures taken by the government in the 2004 general election the party in alliance with the BJP again was humiliated winning none of the 39 Lok Sabha seats from the state The Secular Progressive Alliance SPA a DMK led alliance consisting of all the major opposition parties in the state swept the election Later in the 2006 assembly election in spite of media speculations of a hung assembly the AIADMK contesting with only the support of the MDMK and a few other smaller parties won 61 seats compared to the DMK s 96 and was pushed out of power by the DMK led congressional alliance of the PMK and the Left Front The AIADMK s electoral reversals continued in the 2009 general election However the party s performance was better than its debacle in 2004 and it managed to win nine seats Swearing in Ceremony of the Council of Ministers headed by Jayalalithaa on 16 May 2011 Following widespread corruption a price rise a power cut and allegations of nepotism against the DMK government in the 2011 assembly election the party in alliance with parties like the left and actor turned politician Vijayakant s Desiya Murpokku Dravida Kazhagam DMDK swept the polls winning 202 seats with the AIADMK winning 150 Jayalalithaa was sworn in as chief minister for the fourth time 50 In the union territory of Puducherry the AIADMK allied with N Rangasamy s All India N R Congress AINRC and won the 2011 assembly election which was held in parallel with the Tamil Nadu assembly election However it did not join the newly elected AINRC led government The AIADMK s good electoral performance continued in the 2014 general election as well It opted not to join any alliance and contested all seats in the state of Tamil Nadu and the union territory of Puducherry on its own The party won an unprecedented 37 out of the 40 parliamentary constituencies it contested and emerged as the third largest party in the 16th Lok Sabha of the Indian Parliament It was a massive victory that no other regional political party had ever achieved in the history of general elections On 29 August 2014 J Jayalalithaa was elected as the general secretary of the party for the 7th consecutive term making her the longest serving general secretary of the party to date Earlier she was elected in the years 1988 1989 1993 1998 2003 52 2008 53 and 2014 54 During her longest tenure as general secretary V R Nedunchezhiyan K Kalimuthu Pulamaipithan 55 C Ponnaiyan 56 57 and E Madhusudhanan 58 served as the presidium chairmen of the party 42 On 27 September 2014 Jayalalithaa was convicted in the disproportionate assets case by a Special Court along with her associates V K Sasikala Ilavarasi and V N Sudhakaran and sentenced to four years simple imprisonment Jayalalithaa was also fined 100 crore and her associates were fined 10 crore each The case had political implications as it was the first time a ruling chief minister had to step down on account of a court sentence 59 Due to her resignation O Panneerselvam was sworn in as chief minister on 29 September 2014 60 Jayalalithaa was denied bail by the High Court and moved the Supreme Court for bail The Supreme Court granted bail on 17 October 2014 On 11 May 2015 the High Court of Karnataka said she was acquitted from that case and was again sworn in as chief minister for the fifth time 50 In the 2016 assembly election running without allies she swept the polls winning 136 out of 234 seats It was the most audacious decision made by her for the massive victory that no other political leader had ever made in the history of Tamil Nadu On 23 May 2016 Jayalalithaa was sworn in as chief minister for the sixth time 50 On 22 September 2016 she was admitted to Apollo Hospital Chennai due to fever and dehydration After a prolonged illness she died on 5 December 2016 and became the third chief minister in Tamil Nadu to die in office after Anna and her mentor M G R Expansion beyond Tamil Nadu and Puducherry Edit Under Jayalalithaa s regime the party spread beyond Tamil Nadu and Puducherry State units are established in Andhra Pradesh Karnataka and Kerala The party also has a following in places like the Andaman and Nicobar Islands Maharashtra the National Capital Territory of Delhi and Telangana in India as well as in other countries where Tamil people are present In Karnataka the party had members in the state assembly from 1983 to 2004 and has influence in the Tamil speaking areas of Bengaluru and Kolar In Andhra Pradesh Kerala and Maharashtra the party contested some legislative assembly elections but did not win a single seat in any of the elections V K Sasikala and T T V Dhinakaran era 31 December 2016 17 February 2017 Edit After Jayalalithaa s death on 5 December 2016 her close aide V K Sasikala was selected unanimously as the Acting General Secretary of the party on 31 December 2016 61 62 On 5 February 2017 she was selected as the leader of the legislative assembly as chief minister O Panneerselvam rebelled against Sasikala and reported that he had been compelled to resign as Chief Minister bringing in a new twist to Tamil Nadu politics Due to a conviction in the disproportionate assets case against Jayalalithaa Sasikala was sentenced to 4 years imprisonment in the Bengaluru Central Prison Before that she appointed Edappadi K Palaniswami as legislative party leader Chief Minister She also appointed her nephew and former treasurer of the party T T V Dhinakaran as the deputy general secretary of the AIADMK party With the support of 123 MLAs Palaniswami became chief minister of Tamil Nadu On 23 March 2017 the Election Commission of India ECI gave separate party symbols to the two factions O Panneerselvam s faction known as AIADMK PURATCHI THALAIVI AMMA and Edappadi K Palaniswami s faction known as AIADMK AMMA By polls were announced in the Dr Radhakrishnan Nagar constituency which was vacated due to Jayalalithaa s death But the election commission cancelled the by polls after evidence of large scale bribery by the ruling AIADMK AMMA surfaced On 17 April 2017 Delhi police registered a case against Dhinakaran who was also the candidate for AIADMK AMMA for the by election at Dr Radhakrishnan Nagar regarding an allegation of attempting to bribe the Election Commission of India for the AIADMK s election symbol However the Central District Tis Hazari Courts granted him bail on the grounds that the police had failed to identify the allegedly bribed public official T T V Dhinakaran started his party work on 5 August 2017 However the chief minister Edappadi K Palaniswami had a fallout with Dhinakaran and announced that the appointment of Dinakaran as deputy general secretary was invalid So he claims We are the real AIADMK and 95 of its cadres are with us Expulsion of V K Sasikala and T T V Dhinakaran Edit On 12 September 2017 the AIADMK general council which had earlier appointed her cancelled V K Sasikala s appointment as general secretary and officially expelled her from the party as a primary member 63 64 Earlier on 10 August 2017 T T V Dhinakaran was sacked as deputy general secretary at the meeting headed by Edappadi K Palaniswami at Puratchi Thalaivar M G R Maaligai in Chennai 65 64 After completing her imprisonment at Bengaluru Central Prison Sasikala filed a case in the City Civil Court IV of Chennai in February 2021 but it upheld her dismissal as the AIADMK general secretary in April 2022 66 O Panneerselvam and Edappadi K Palaniswami era 21 August 2017 23 June 2022 Edit On 21 August 2017 both O Panneerselvam and Edappadi K Palaniswami factions of the AIADMK merged and O Panneerselvam was sworn in as the Deputy Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu with the portfolio of Finance and the coordinator of the AIADMK He also holds portfolios for housing rural housing housing development the slum clearance board accommodation control town planning urban development and the Chennai Metropolitan Development Authority 67 On 4 January 2018 O Panneerselvam was elected Leader of the House in the Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly On 12 September 2017 the AIADMK general council decided to cancel V K Sasikala s appointment as acting general secretary and officially expel her from the party though prominent members appointed to party posts by her were allowed to continue discharging their functions Instead the late J Jayalalithaa was named the eternal general secretary of the AIADMK 63 64 A day after the merger of two AIADMK factions on 22 April 2017 19 MLAs 68 owing allegiance to ousted deputy general secretary T T V Dhinakaran submitted letters to the governor expressing lack of confidence in Chief Minister Edappadi K Palaniswami and withdrawing support from the government 68 18 out of those 19 MLAs were disqualified from office by the Speaker of the legislative assembly upon recommendation from the AIADMK Chief Whip After a prolonged legal battle the Speaker s orders were upheld by the Madras High Court and bye elections were held alongside the general parliamentary elections On 23 November 2017 the Election Commission of India granted the two leaves symbol to the O Panneerselvam and Edappadi K Palaniswami camp On 14 November 2017 the AIADMK launched News J named after the AIADMK former general secretary J Jayalalithaa to replace Jaya TV 2 69 On 24 February 2018 AIADMK s new mouthpiece Namadhu Amma a Tamil daily was launched marking the 70th birth anniversary of the AIADMK former general secretary J Jayalalithaa 1 70 Despite the popular measures taken by the government in the 2019 Lok Sabha election the party in alliance with the BJP again was humiliated winning one of the 39 Lok Sabha seats from the state The Secular Progressive Alliance SPA a DMK led alliance consisting of all the major opposition parties in the state swept the election by winning 38 seats Later in the 2021 assembly election the AIADMK which had the support of the same National Democratic Alliance NDA and a few other smaller parties won 66 seats compared to the DMK s 133 seats and was pushed out of power by the DMK led secular progressive alliance After the election the AIADMK emerged as the main party of the opposition in the assembly On 11 May 2021 party joint coordinator Edappadi K Palaniswami was recognized as the Leader of the Opposition in the Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly and on 14 June 2021 party coordinator O Panneerselvam was recognized as the Deputy Leader of the Opposition in the Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly by M Appavu Speaker of the Assembly Legal Fight for the party by V K Sasikala and T T V Dhinakaran Edit After that V K Sasikala and T T V Dhinakaran had appealed to the Delhi High Court which rejected their appeal and said that O Panneerselvam and Edappadi K Palaniswami were the original AIADMK Following that T T V Dhinakaran filed an appeal with the Supreme Court of India on March 15 and the bench of the Chief Justice of India dismissed his appeal against the Delhi High Court s decision in favor of the O Panneerselvam and Edappadi K Palaniswami camp Following this the General Council passed a resolution removing V K Sasikala from the post of General Secretary V K Sasikala and T T V Dhinakaran jointly filed a suit in the High Court challenging the decision of the General Council Since it was a civil case the case was transferred to the City Civil Court During the hearing on 9 April 2021 Dinakaran told the court that he would withdraw from the case as he had started a party called Amma Makkal Munnettra Kazagam At the same time Sasikala told the court that she wanted to continue the case The court dismissed her plea following an interlocutory application from AIADMK Coordinator O Panneerselvam and Joint Coordinator Edappadi K Palaniswami 71 Tensions with BJP Edit In June 2022 the AIADMK and BJP were at odds publicly 72 AIADMK organisation secretary C Ponnaiyan accused the BJP led Central government of stealing Tamil Nadu s revenue as well as blaming AIADMK for election losses the loss of minority community support and anti Tamil policies particularly those affecting students 73 He also called the alliance an electoral adjustment claiming that the BJP was attempting to expand at the cost of the AIADMK in Tamil Nadu and that its ideology is diametrically opposite that of the AIADMK 74 75 The event reportedly had party cadres reiterating these sentiments albeit in a lighter tone and agreeing that the BJP was attempting to wrest control of the state s opposition from the AIADMK 72 Leadership tussle between O P S and E P S Edit On 14 June 2022 citing the party s troubles in the polls AIADMK district secretaries and other senior party members spoke out to shun the dual leadership system and came out publicly in favor of a strong unitary leader to strengthen the organisation Supporters of Edappadi K Palaniswami pushed for the change in the party s leadership structure by staging a political coup against AIADMK Coordinator O Panneerselvam who had become weak within the party According to many sources of the AIADMK s 75 district secretaries hardly 10 supported him Of the party s 66 MLAs only three were reportedly on O Panneerselvam s side and less than 20 percent of the party s general council members were behind him ahead of the crucial general council meeting on 23 June 2022 which was expected to elect the single leadership to the party 76 On 23 June 2022 A Tamil Magan Hussain was unanimously elected as the Presidium Chairman of the party at a general council meeting held at the Shrivaaru Venkataachalapathy Palace in Vanagaram Chennai 77 78 On the same day Presidium Chairman Tamil Magan Hussain announced that the next general council meeting of the party would be held on 11 July 2022 79 80 On 30 June 2022 Edappadi K Palaniswami wrote a letter to O Panneerselvam asserting the latter ceased to be the party coordinator as the amendments made to the party s bylaw in the December 2020 executive committee meeting were not recognised in the general council meeting held on 23 June 2022 81 82 Edappadi K Palaniswami era 11 July 2022 Present Edit Dr Edappadi K PalaniswamiGeneral Secretary of the party On 11 July 2022 an AIADMK general council meeting was held at the Shrivaaru Venkataachalapathy Palace in Vanagaram following the dismissal of a petition by O Panneerselvam in the Madras High Court 83 The party general council abolished the dual leadership model empowered Edappadi K Palaniswami as the interim general secretary and called for organisational elections in 4 months 84 Before the general council meeting there was violence at the Puratchi Thalaivar M G R Maaligai in Royapettah where the supporters of Palaniswami and Panneerselvam threw stones bottles and plastic chairs at each other and damaged several vehicles nearby 85 Following this the Revenue Department of Tamil Nadu sealed the Puratchi Thalaivar M G R Maaligai Overall 47 people were injured in the clashes 86 The general council meeting made 20 amendments to the AIADMK bylaws including the removal of rule 20 which had described J Jayalalithaa as the eternal general secretary reviving the post of general secretary transferring all the powers of the coordinator and joint coordinator to the general secretary and abolishing the posts of coordinator and joint coordinator These changes effectively ended the party s dual leadership 87 Expulsion of O Panneerselvam Edit In the general council meeting held on 11 July 2022 the general council members passed the resolution and expelled the former coordinator O Panneerselvam 88 the former deputy coordinator R Vaithilingam P H Manoj Pandian and J C D Prabhakar from their respective posts and primary membership in the party for anti party activities 89 90 On 11 July 2022 former chief minister of Tamil Nadu Edappadi K Palaniswami was unanimously elected as the interim general secretary of the party in the general council meeting held at the Shrivaaru Venkatachalapathy Palace in Vanagaram Chennai 16 Palaniswami appointed Dindigul C Srinivasan as the treasurer of the party replacing O Panneerselvam 91 On 19 July 2022 Palaniswami appointed R B Udhayakumar as the deputy leader of the opposition in the Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly replacing Panneerselvam who declared this in the party s legislative members meeting held on 17 July 2022 92 93 On 20 July 2022 the Madras High Court ordered to remove the seal of Puratchi Thalaivar M G R Maaligai and hand over the keys to the interim general secretary Edappadi K Palaniswami 94 It was previously locked and sealed on 11 July 2022 95 96 On 12 September 2022 the Supreme Court of India dismissed the petition of O Panneerselvam challenging the Madras High Court s order to handover the keys to Palaniswami 97 Legal Fight for the party between Palaniswami and Panneerselvam Edit The Madras High Court on 17 August 2022 ruled in favor of O Panneerselvam and declared the AIADMK general council meeting held on 11 July 2022 which had abolished dual leadership as void ab initio The court called for the restoration of the status quo as it existed on June 23 and has prevented the party from convening any meeting of the executive council or the general council of the party without joint consent from both Palaniswami and Panneerselvam thus effectively restoring dual leadership The court cited procedural lapses to declare the general council meeting held on July 11 invalid and found that there was no data to prove Edappadi K Palaniswami s claim that 95 of the 1 5 crore 15 million primary party members supported unitary leadership under him 98 99 100 101 Edappadi K Palaniswami appealed the single judge court order to a larger bench of judges 102 Following the order O Panneerselvam appealed for party unity which included the splinter AMMK group 103 Palaniswami dismissed this appeal as a power hungry move by Panneerselvam and held him responsible for violence at the Puratchi Thalaivar M G R Maaligai 104 On 2 September 2022 a division bench of the Madras High Court upheld the decisions of the AIADMK general council meeting held on 11 June 2022 and set aside the previous court order of the single judge in the appeal case of Edappadi K Palaniswami thus effectively restoring unitary leadership 105 17 Criticism EditBeing a popular actor M G R s fan clubs became a source for electoral mobilization The head of his fan club R M Veerappan became a lieutenant and fellow actress J Jayalalithaa was groomed as a possible heir apparent 106 During M G R s reign there was a near collapse of the administrative system and the state s rank in industrial production fell from third in the country in 1977 to thirteenth in 1987 Populist schemes that consumed two thirds of the state s budget resulted in long term economic costs M G R was running a centralised administration which took a severe toll on the state administration during his extended period of illness 107 Personality cult Edit J Jayalalithaa was also accused of creating a personality cult with fans and party activists calling her Amma meaning mother in Tamil Her face adorned food canteens pharmacies salt packets laptop computers baby care kits bottled water medicine shops and cement bags Following her imprisonment on 27 September 2014 her supporters held protests and wept openly Her replacement the party s former chief minister O Panneerselvam also wept during his inauguration with colleagues saying they were in mourning 108 Due to the centralised leadership of Jayalalithaa the state of Tamil Nadu experienced policy paralysis with most legislators and party cadres protesting against her convictions with hunger fasts and road and rail blockades 109 110 The entire Cabinet would fall into line and bow in front of the helicopter in which it was flying Members of the party at all levels never found it difficult to prostrate before her in full view of the public 111 Even after her death the AIADMK leaders continued to prostrate themselves before her tomb in the M G R and Jayalalithaa Memorial Complex 112 113 Debt crisis Edit The overall debt burden of Tamil Nadu is expected to reach more than 5 lakh crore by March 31 2022 during the AIADMK government 114 In 2011 the state debt as a percentage of GSDP increased by about 5 during J Jayalalithaa and the AIADMK s tenure It was 16 92 in 2011 12 It was 21 83 as of April 2021 during the Edappadi K Palaniswami government 115 The opposition criticised the financial mismanagement by the AIADMK which left 62 thousand per person in the state The opposition criticised the fact that the entire debt of the state government in the 2006 11 DMK regime was only 44 thousand crore but the AIADMK regime has a debt of 3 55 lakh crore 116 The overall debt the AIADMK government left behind as of 31 March 2021 is estimated to be 4 85 502 54 crore and as of 31 March 2022 it is estimated to be 5 70 189 29 crore 117 Electoral performance EditIndian general elections Edit Vote share in Lok Sabha Elections2019 1 37 2014 3 31 2009 1 67 2004 2 19 1999 1 93 1998 1 83 1996 0 64 1991 1 62 1989 1 50 1984 1 69 1980 2 36 1977 2 90 Lok Sabha Elections Year Party leader Seats contested Seats won Change in seats Percentage of votes Vote swing Popular vote Result1977 M G Ramachandran 21 18 542 18 2 90 5 480 378 Government1980 24 2 542 16 2 36 0 54 4 674 064 Opposition1984 12 12 533 10 1 69 0 67 3 968 967 Government1989 J Jayalalithaa 11 11 545 1 1 50 0 19 4 518 649 Opposition1991 11 11 545 1 62 0 12 4 470 542 Government1996 10 0 545 11 0 64 0 98 2 130 286 Lost1998 23 18 545 18 1 83 1 19 6 731 550 Government1999 29 10 545 8 1 93 0 10 7 046 953 Opposition2004 33 0 543 10 2 19 0 26 8 547 014 Lost2009 23 9 543 9 1 67 0 52 6 953 591 Others2014 40 37 543 28 3 31 1 64 18 111 5792019 O Panneerselvam and Edappadi K Palaniswami 22 1 543 36 1 37 1 94 8 307 345 GovernmentState legislative assembly elections Edit Vote share in Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly Elections2021 33 29 2016 40 77 2011 38 40 2006 32 64 2001 31 44 1996 21 47 1991 44 39 1989 21 77 1984 37 03 1980 38 75 1977 30 36 Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly Elections 118 Year Party leader Seats contested Seats won Change in seats Percentage of votes Vote swing Popular vote Result1977 M G Ramachandran 200 130 234 130 30 36 5 194 876 Government1980 177 129 234 1 38 75 8 39 7 303 0101984 155 132 234 3 37 03 1 72 8 030 8091989 J Jayalalithaa 202 29 234 103 21 77 15 26 5 247 317 Opposition1991 168 164 234 135 44 39 22 62 10 940 966 Government1996 168 4 234 160 21 47 22 92 5 831 383 Others2001 141 132 234 128 31 44 9 97 8 815 387 Government2006 188 61 234 71 32 64 1 20 10 768 559 Opposition2011 165 150 234 89 38 40 5 76 14 150 289 Government2016 234 136 234 14 41 06 2 66 17 617 0602021 O Panneerselvam and Edappadi K Palaniswami 191 66 234 70 33 29 7 48 15 391 055 OppositionVote share in Puducherry Legislative Assembly Elections2021 4 14 2016 16 82 2011 13 75 2006 16 04 2001 12 56 1996 12 53 1991 17 34 1990 18 17 1985 15 75 1980 18 60 1977 30 96 1974 27 83 Puducherry Legislative Assembly Elections 119 Year Party leader Seats contested Seats won Change in seats Percentage of votes Vote swing Popular vote Result1974 M G Ramachandran 21 12 30 12 27 83 60 812 Government1977 27 14 30 2 30 96 3 13 69 8731980 18 0 30 14 18 60 12 36 45 623 Lost1985 10 6 30 6 15 75 2 85 47 521 Opposition1990 J Jayalalithaa 13 3 30 3 18 17 2 42 76 3371991 10 6 30 3 17 34 0 83 67 792 Government1996 10 3 30 3 12 53 4 81 57 678 Opposition2001 20 3 30 12 56 0 03 59 926 Government2006 18 3 30 16 04 3 48 90 699 Others2011 10 5 30 2 13 75 2 29 95 960 Government2016 30 4 30 1 16 82 3 07 134 597 Opposition2021 O Panneerselvam and Edappadi K Palaniswami 5 0 30 4 4 14 12 68 34 623 LostVote share in Karnataka Legislative Assembly Elections2018 0 01 2013 0 03 2008 0 03 2004 0 07 1999 0 18 1994 0 24 1989 0 18 1983 0 13 1978 0 18 Karnataka Legislative Assembly Elections 120 Year Party leader Seats contested Seats won Change in seats Percentage of votes Vote swing Popular vote Result1978 M G Ramachandran 7 0 224 0 18 22 310 Lost1983 1 1 224 1 0 13 0 05 16 234 Government1989 J Jayalalithaa 1 1 224 0 18 0 05 32 9281994 4 1 224 0 24 0 06 50 696 Opposition1999 13 1 224 0 18 0 06 39 865 Government2004 2 0 224 1 0 07 0 11 16 737 Lost2008 7 0 224 0 03 0 04 9 0882013 5 0 224 0 03 10 2802018 O Panneerselvam and Edappadi K Palaniswami 3 0 224 0 01 0 02 2 072Vote share in Kerala Legislative Assembly Elections2021 0 05 2016 0 17 2011 0 01 2006 0 12 1980 0 00 1977 0 02 Kerala Legislative Assembly Elections 121 Year Party leader Seats contested Seats won Change in seats Percentage of votes Vote swing Popular vote Result1977 M G Ramachandran 2 0 140 0 02 2 114 Lost1980 1 0 140 0 00 0 02 2242006 J Jayalalithaa 29 0 140 0 12 0 12 19 0782011 4 0 140 0 01 0 11 2 4482016 7 0 140 0 17 0 16 33 4402021 O Panneerselvam and Edappadi K Palaniswami 1 0 140 0 05 0 12 10 376Vote share in Andhra Pradesh Legislative Assembly Elections1999 0 02 1994 0 05 1978 0 19 Andhra Pradesh Legislative Assembly Elections 122 Year Party leader Seats contested Seats won Change in seats Percentage of votes Vote swing Popular vote Result1978 M G Ramachandran 9 0 294 0 19 38 691 Lost1994 J Jayalalithaa 2 0 294 0 05 0 14 14 2511999 5 0 294 0 02 0 03 7 281Vote share in Maharashtra Legislative Assembly Elections2009 0 01 1999 0 01 Maharashtra Legislative Assembly Elections 123 Year Party leader Seats contested Seats won Change in seats Percentage of votes Vote swing Popular vote Result1999 J Jayalalithaa 3 0 288 0 01 3 711 Lost2009 2 0 288 0 01 2 587Current office bearers and prominent members EditMember Position in Government Party PositionEdappadi K Palaniswami Leader of the Opposition in the Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly Member of the Legislative Assembly from Edappadi Former Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu Interim General SecretaryK P Munusamy Member of the Legislative Assembly from Veppanahalli Former Member of Parliament Lok Sabha from Krishnagiri Former Member of Parliament Rajya Sabha Deputy General SecretaryNatham R Viswanathan Member of the Legislative Assembly from Natham Former Minister for Electricity Prohibition and Excise of Tamil Nadu Deputy General SecretaryA Tamil Magan Hussain Former Chairperson of Tamil Nadu Waqf Board Presidium ChairmanDindigul C Srinivasan Member of the Legislative Assembly from Dindigul Former Member of Parliament Lok Sabha from Dindigul Former Minister for Forest of Tamil Nadu TreasurerS P Velumani Chief Whip of the Opposition in the Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly Member of the Legislative Assembly from Thondamuthur Former Minister for Municipal Administration Rural Development and Implementation of SpecialProgramme of Tamil Nadu Puratchi Thalaivar M G R Maaligai SecretaryM Thambidurai Member of Parliament Rajya Sabha Former Minister of Law Justice and Company Affairs of the Republic of India Former Deputy Speaker of the Lok Sabha Rajya Sabha Leader and Propaganda SecretaryR B Udhayakumar Deputy Leader of the Opposition in the Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly Member of the Legislative Assembly from Thirumangalam Former Minister for Revenue and Disaster Management of Tamil Nadu Puratchi Thalaivi Amma Federation SecretaryS Ravi Deputy Whip of the Opposition in the Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly Member of the Legislative Assembly from Arakkonam Ranipet District SecretaryKadambur C Raju Treasurer of the Opposition in the Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly Member of the Legislative Assembly from Kovilpatti Former Minister for Information and Publicity of Tamil Nadu Thoothukkudi North District SecretaryK P Anbalagan Secretary of the Opposition in the Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly Member of the Legislative Assembly from Palacode Former Minister for Higher Education of Tamil Nadu Dharmapuri District SecretaryAgri S S Krishnamoorthy Member of the Legislative Assembly from Polur Former Minister for Agriculture of Tamil Nadu Agriculture Wing SecretaryC Ponnaiyan Former Minister for Finance of Tamil Nadu All World M G R Forum SecretaryPollachi V Jayaraman Member of the Legislative Assembly from Pollachi Former Deputy Speaker of the Tamil Nadu legislative assembly Election Wing SecretaryB Valarmathi Former Minister for Social Welfare and Nutritious Noon Meal Programme of Tamil Nadu Women s Wing SecretaryA Justin Selvaraj Minority Welfare Wing SecretaryThadi Ma Rasu Anna Trade Union Federation PresidentP Venugopal Former Member of Parliament Lok Sabha from Thiruvallur Medical Wing SecretaryV S Sethuraman Advocate Wing PresidentVaigaichelvan Former Minister for School Education of Tamil Nadu Literature Wing SecretaryR Kamalakannan Anna Trade Union Federation SecretaryK Sankaradas Non organizational Driver Wing SecretaryS R Vijayakumar Former Member of Parliament Lok Sabha from Chennai Central Student Wing SecretaryN R Sivapathi Former Minister for Animal Husbandry of Tamil Nadu M G R Youth Wing SecretaryV P B Paramasivam Former Member of the Legislative Assembly from Vedasandur Youth Brigade SecretarySingai G Ramachandran IT Wing SecretaryState Unit SecretariesA Anbalagan Former Member of the Legislative Assembly from Oupalam Puducherry East Unit SecretaryS D Kumar Karnataka Unit SecretaryG Shobakumar Kerala Unit SecretaryList of party leaders EditPresidents Edit No Portrait Name Birth Death Term in OfficeAssumed Office Left Office Time in Office1 M G Ramachandran 1917 1987 17 October 1972 24 December 1987 15 years 68 daysGeneral Secretaries Edit No Portrait Name Birth Death Term in OfficeAssumed Office Left Office Time in Office1 M G Ramachandran 1917 1987 17 October 1972 22 June 1978 6 years 316 days17 October 1986 24 December 19872 V R Nedunchezhiyan 1920 2000 23 June 1978 10 June 1980 3 years 33 days25 December 1987 8 February 19893 P U Shanmugam 1924 2007 11 June 1980 13 March 1985 4 years 275 days4 S Raghavanandam 1917 1999 14 March 1985 16 October 1986 1 year 216 days5 J Jayalalithaa 1948 2016 9 February 1989 5 December 2016 27 years 300 daysActing V K Sasikala 1954 31 December 2016 17 February 2017 48 daysInterim Edappadi K Palaniswami 1954 11 July 2022 Incumbent 192 daysCoordinators Edit No Portrait Name Birth Death Term in OfficeAssumed Office Left Office Time in Office1 CoordinatorO Panneerselvam 1951 21 August 2017 23 June 2022 4 years 306 days Joint CoordinatorEdappadi K Palaniswami 1954 Legislative leaders EditList of union cabinet ministers Edit No Portrait Name Birth Death Portfolio Term in Office Constituency House Prime MinisterAssumed Office Left Office Time in Office1 Sathiavani Muthu 1923 1999 Minister of Social Welfare 19 August 1979 23 December 1979 126 days Tamil Nadu Rajya Sabha Charan Singh2 A Bala Pajanor 1935 2013 Minister of Petroleum Chemicals and Fertilizers Puducherry Lok Sabha 3 R Muthiah 1945 2022 Minister of Surface Transport 19 March 1998 8 April 1998 20 days Periyakulam Lok Sabha Atal Bihari Vajpayee4 M Thambidurai 1947 Minister of Law Justice and Company Affairs 19 March 1998 8 April 1999 1 year 20 days Karur Lok Sabha Minister of Surface Transport 8 April 1998 1 yearList of chief ministers Edit Chief Ministers of Tamil Nadu Edit Further information List of chief ministers of Tamil Nadu No Portrait Name Birth Death Term in Office Assembly Election Constituency MinistryAssumed Office Left Office Time in Office1 M G Ramachandran 1917 1987 30 June 1977 17 February 1980 10 years 65 days 6th 1977 election Aruppukkottai Ramachandran I9 June 1980 9 February 1985 7th 1980 election Madurai West Ramachandran II10 February 1985 24 December 1987 8th 1984 election Andipatti Ramachandran IIIActing V R Nedunchezhiyan 1920 2000 24 December 1987 7 January 1988 14 days Athoor Nedunchezhiyan II2 V N Janaki Ramachandran 1924 1996 7 January 1988 30 January 1988 23 days Did not contest Janaki3 J Jayalalithaa 1948 2016 24 June 1991 12 May 1996 14 years 124 days 10th 1991 election Bargur Jayalalithaa I14 May 2001 21 September 2001 12th 2001 election Did not contest Jayalalithaa II2 March 2002 12 May 2006 Andipatti Jayalalithaa III16 May 2011 27 September 2014 14th 2011 election Srirangam Jayalalithaa IV23 May 2015 22 May 2016 Dr Radhakrishnan Nagar Jayalalithaa V23 May 2016 5 December 2016 15th 2016 election Jayalalithaa VI4 O Panneerselvam 1951 21 September 2001 2 March 2002 1 year 105 days 12th 2001 election Periyakulam Panneerselvam I28 September 2014 23 May 2015 14th 2011 election Bodinayakanur Panneerselvam II6 December 2016 15 February 2017 15th 2016 election Panneerselvam III5 Edappadi K Palaniswami 1954 16 February 2017 6 May 2021 4 years 79 days Edappadi PalaniswamiChief Minister of Puducherry Edit Further information List of chief ministers of Puducherry No Portrait Name Birth Death Term in Office Assembly Election Constituency MinistryAssumed Office Left Office Time in Office1 S Ramassamy 1939 2017 6 March 1974 28 March 1974 1 year 155 days 4th 1974 election Karaikal South Ramassamy I2 July 1977 12 November 1978 5th 1977 election Ramassamy IIList of deputy chief ministers Edit Deputy Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu Edit Further information List of deputy chief ministers of Tamil Nadu No Portrait Name Birth Death Term in Office Assembly Election Constituency Chief MinisterAssumed Office Left Office Time in Office1 O Panneerselvam 1951 21 August 2017 6 May 2021 3 years 258 days 15th 2016 election Bodinayakanur Edappadi K PalaniswamiList of deputy speakers of the Lok Sabha Edit Further information Deputy Speaker of the Lok Sabha No Portrait Name Birth Death Term in Office Lok Sabha Election Constituency SpeakerAssumed Office Left Office Time in Office1 M Thambidurai 1947 22 January 1985 27 November 1989 9 years 229 days 8th 1984 election Dharmapuri Balram Jakhar13 August 2014 25 May 2019 16th 2014 election Karur Sumitra MahajanList of union ministers of state Edit No Portrait Name Birth Death Portfolio Term in Office Constituency House Cabinet Minister Prime MinisterAssumed Office Left Office Time in Office1 R K Kumar 1942 1999 Minister of State for Parliamentary Affairs 19 March 1998 22 May 1998 64 days Tamil Nadu Rajya Sabha Madan Lal Khurana Atal Bihari VajpayeeMinister of State for Finance 20 March 1998 63 days Yashwant Sinha2 Kadambur M R Janarthanan 1929 2020 Minister of State for Personnel Public Grievances and Pensions 20 March 1998 8 April 1999 1 year 19 days Tirunelveli Lok Sabha Atal Bihari VajpayeeMinister of State for Finance 22 May 1998 321 days Yashwant SinhaList of speakers Edit Speakers of the Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly Edit Further information List of speakers of the Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly No Portrait Name Birth Death Term in Office Assembly Election ConstituencyAssumed Office Left Office Time in Office1 Munu Adhi 1926 2005 6 July 1977 18 June 1980 2 years 348 days 6th 1977 election Tambaram2 K Rajaram 1926 2008 21 June 1980 24 February 1985 4 years 248 days 7th 1980 election Panamarathupatti3 P H Pandian 1945 2020 27 February 1985 5 February 1989 3 years 344 days 8th 1984 election Cheranmadevi4 R Muthiah 1945 2022 3 July 1991 21 May 1996 4 years 323 days 10th 1991 election Sedapatti5 K Kalimuthu 1942 2006 24 May 2001 1 February 2006 4 years 253 days 12th 2001 election Thirumangalam6 D Jayakumar 1960 27 May 2011 29 September 2012 1 year 125 days 14th 2011 election Royapuram7 P Dhanapal 1951 10 October 2012 24 May 2016 8 years 196 days Rasipuram3 June 2016 3 May 2021 15th 2016 election AvanashiSpeakers of the Puducherry Legislative Assembly Edit Further information List of speakers of the Puducherry Legislative Assembly No Portrait Name Birth Death Term in Office Assembly Election ConstituencyAssumed Office Left Office Time in Office1 S Pakkiam unknown unknown 26 March 1974 28 March 1974 2 days 4th 1974 election BussyList of deputy speakers Edit Deputy speakers of the Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly Edit No Portrait Name Birth Death Term in Office Assembly Election Constituency SpeakerAssumed Office Left Office Time in Office1 Su Thirunavukkarasar 1949 6 July 1977 17 February 1980 2 years 226 days 6th 1977 election Arantangi Munu Adhi2 P H Pandian 1945 2020 21 June 1980 15 November 1984 4 years 147 days 7th 1980 election Cheranmadevi K Rajaram3 V P Balasubramanian 1946 27 February 1985 30 January 1988 2 years 337 days 8th 1984 election Vedasandur P H Pandian4 K Ponnusamy Unknown 3 July 1991 16 May 1993 1 year 317 days 10th 1991 election Marungapuri R Muthiah5 S Gandhirajan 1951 27 October 1993 13 May 1996 2 years 199 days Vedasandur6 A Arunachalam Unknown 24 May 2001 12 May 2006 4 years 353 days 12th 2001 election Varahur K Kalimuthu7 P Dhanapal 1951 27 May 2011 9 October 2012 1 year 135 days 14th 2011 election Rasipuram D Jayakumar8 Pollachi V Jayaraman 1952 29 October 2012 21 May 2016 8 years 174 days Udumalaipettai P Dhanapal3 June 2016 3 May 2021 15th 2016 election PollachiList of leaders of the opposition Edit Leaders of the Opposition in the Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly Edit Further information List of leaders of the opposition in the Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly No Portrait Name Birth Death Term in Office Assembly Election ConstituencyAssumed Office Left Office Time in Office1 J Jayalalithaa 1948 2016 9 February 1989 1 December 1989 5 years 280 days 9th 1989 election Bodinayakanur29 May 2006 14 May 2011 13th 2006 election Andipatti2 S R Eradha 1934 2020 1 December 1989 19 January 1991 1 year 49 days 9th 1989 election Madurai East3 O Panneerselvam 1951 19 May 2006 28 May 2006 9 days 13th 2006 election Periyakulam4 Edappadi K Palaniswami 1954 11 May 2021 Incumbent 1 year 253 days 16th 2021 election EdappadiLeaders of the Opposition in the Puducherry Legislative Assembly Edit Further information List of leaders of the opposition in the Puducherry Legislative Assembly No Portrait Name Birth Death Term in Office Assembly Election ConstituencyAssumed Office Left Office Time in Office1 P K Loganathan 1938 2013 16 March 1985 4 March 1990 4 years 353 days 7th 1985 election Oupalam2 V M C V Ganapathy 1960 4 July 1991 13 May 1996 4 years 314 days 9th 1991 election Neravy T R PattinamList of deputy leaders of the opposition Edit Deputy leaders of the Opposition in the Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly Edit No Portrait Name Birth Death Term in Office Assembly Election Constituency Leader of the OppositionAssumed Office Left Office Time in Office1 Su Thirunavukkarasar 1949 9 February 1989 19 January 1991 1 year 344 days 9th 1989 election Aranthangi J Jayalalithaa S R Eradha2 K A Sengottaiyan 1948 19 May 2006 28 May 2006 9 days 13th 2006 election Gobichettipalayam O Panneerselvam3 O Panneerselvam 1951 29 May 2006 14 May 2011 6 years 12 days Periyakulam J Jayalalithaa14 June 2021 11 July 2022 16th 2021 election Bodinayakanur Edappadi K Palaniswami4 R B Udhayakumar 1973 19 July 2022 Incumbent 184 days ThirumangalamSee also Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam Politics of India List of political parties in IndiaReferences Edit a b AIADMK mouthpiece to be launched on February 24 thehindu 22 February 2018 Retrieved 23 February 2018 a b AIADMK Launches Its Own News Channel Named After Jayalalithaa outlookindia 13 September 2018 Retrieved 13 September 2018 Price P 1996 Revolution and Rank in Tamil Nationalism The Journal of Asian Studies 55 2 359 383 doi 10 2307 2943363 Pamela Price 1999 Relating to leadership in the Tamil nationalist movement C N Annadurai in person centred propaganda South Asia Journal of South Asian Studies 22 2 149 174 doi 10 1080 00856409908723369 Ogden Chris 20 June 2019 A Dictionary of Politics and International Relations in India Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 253915 1 All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam Tamil All India Anna Dravidian Progress Federation A political party It was established in 1972 List of Political Parties and Election Symbols main Notification Dated 18 01 2013 PDF India Election Commission of India 2013 Retrieved 9 May 2013 R Kannan 7 August 2018 Karunanidhi and M G R A checkered friendship and a lesson in civility and empathy The News Minute When Annaism sought de mon The New Indian Express 15 August 2017 Jayalalithaa changed face of Dravidian politics Deccan Chronicle 6 December 2016 Tamil Nadu pact sealed brings AIADMK back to NDA fold Hindustan Times 19 February 2019 Retrieved 7 May 2021 Narasimhan T E 11 May 2015 Extended Mothers Day for AIADMK cadre as Amma Jayalalithaa walks free Business Standard India Retrieved 3 October 2019 Jayalalitha The goddess of Tamil Nadu politics BBC News 5 December 2016 Retrieved 5 December 2016 EPS vs OPS in Tamil Nadu What s all this AIADMK fuss about timesofindia 23 June 2022 Dual power structure not in force OPS ceases to be coordinator says AIADMK economictimes 24 June 2022 OPS EPS elected unopposed as AIADMK coordinator and joint coordinator The Times of India 6 December 2021 a b AIADMK general council anoints Edappadi K Palaniswami as party interim general secretary The Times of India 11 July 2022 Retrieved 11 July 2022 a b S Mohamed Imranullah 2 September 2022 AIADMK leadership tussle Division Bench of Madras High Court reverses earlier order in favour of OPS The Hindu Retrieved 2 September 2022 പന ർസ ൽവത ത ന ച ഹ ന വ ദ യ ത പ സ റ റ ശശ കല പക ഷത ത ന ത പ പ ManoramaOnline in Malayalam a b Sinha 2005 p 107 Kohli Atul Singh Prerna 2013 Routledge Handbook of Indian Politics Routledge p 285 ISBN 9781135122744 Mariappan Julie 14 September 2019 AIADMK firm on two language policy The Times of India Retrieved 26 November 2019 Ramakrishnan Deepa H 5 May 2016 Highlights of AIADMK manifesto The Hindu ISSN 0971 751X Retrieved 26 November 2019 AIADMK lauds economic reforms of Modi government The Times of India 29 March 2019 Retrieved 26 November 2019 How Tamil Nadu s reservation stands at 69 despite the 50 quota cap The News Minute 29 March 2021 Retrieved 17 April 2021 69 quota SC notice to Tamil Nadu The Hindu 6 November 2014 ISSN 0971 751X Retrieved 17 April 2021 Ramakrishnan T 5 December 2016 The woman behind the 69 quota The Hindu Retrieved 6 December 2016 How Tamil Nadu s reservation stands at 69 despite the 50 quota cap thenewsminute Retrieved 29 March 2021 SC quashes Kerala dam law The Hindu Retrieved 8 May 2014 Jayalalithaa dedicates historic victory to people of Tamil Nadu deccanchronicle 8 May 2014 An aggressive campaigner for Tamil Nadu s water rights thehindu 6 December 2016 CM s power play the hits and misses The Hindu Retrieved 19 March 2016 Jayalalithaa takes credit for Centre finally notifying Cauvery Tribunal s award in gazette timesofindia 20 February 2013 Jayalalithaa observes fast on Cauvery issue flays Centre TN govt dnaindia 18 March 2007 Thirumurthy Priyanka 27 May 2017 TN parties condemn Centre s new cattle slaughter rules AIADMK maintains stoic silence The News Minute Retrieved 26 November 2019 AIADMK MPs meet Environment Minister over Jallikattu The New Indian Express Retrieved 26 November 2019 We will rein in PETA promises AIADMK chief Sasikala The News Minute 18 January 2017 Retrieved 26 November 2019 Tuticorin protest Tamil Nadu government orders permanent closure of Sterlite plant The Economic Times 29 May 2018 Retrieved 2 February 2022 Stop Mekedatu dam on river Cauvery says AIADMK MP The Hindu 29 June 2019 ISSN 0971 751X Retrieved 26 November 2019 a b Kohli 1990 p 157 a b c Rana 2006 p 400 Murali 2007 p 81 a b மத ச தனன மற வ அட த த அத ம க அவ த தல வர ய ர வர ச ய ல ம க க ய தல வர கள ன ப யர கள news18 tamil in Tamil Retrieved 6 August 2021 1973 த ண ட க கல இட த த ர தல ஆற ம த க ழந த அத ம க வ ற ற யட ந த சர த த ரம vikatan in Tamil 21 May 2022 a b Murali 2007 p 82 a b c d Murali 2007 p 83 Fight over symbol A leaf from history the hindu 23 March 2017 A throwback to another battle for AIADMK s Two Leaves symbol the hindu 23 November 2017 a b Murali 2007 p 84 Murali 2007 p 87 a b c d e List of Chief Ministers of Tamil Nadu from 1920 Archived from the original on 23 April 2013 Haviland Charles Indian women join elite police BBC Retrieved 11 November 2013 அத ம க ப த ச ச யல ளர க ம ண ட ம த ர வ க ற ர ஜ oneindia tamil in Tamil 6 September 2003 ப த ச ச யல ளர ஜ ப ட ட ய ன ற த ர வ oneindia tamil in Tamil 10 September 2008 அத ம க ப த ச ச யல ளர க ம ண ட ம ஜ 7 வத ம ற ப ட ட ய ன ற த ர வ க ற ர ஆகஸ ட 29 ல த ர தல hindutamil in Tamil 19 August 2014 ப லம ப ப த தன எம ஜ ஆர ன கவ ஞர ஜ யலல த வ ன அவ த தல வர ப லவர ன அரச யல பயணம vikatan in Tamil 8 September 2021 Retrieved 9 September 2021 Ponnaiyan reappointed presidium chairman of AIADMK timesofindia in Tamil Retrieved 5 October 2003 ப லம ப ப த தன க க கல த ப ன ன யன க க ப த பதவ oneindiatamil in Tamil 18 August 2003 Retrieved 18 August 2003 அத ம க அவ த தல வர க மத ச தனன த ர வ oneindiatamil in Tamil 5 February 2007 Retrieved 5 February 2007 Variyar Mugdha 27 September 2014 Jayalalithaa Gets 4 Years Jail Term in Assets Case Has to Step Down as CM International Business Times Jaya moves HC against conviction Panneerselvam sworn in 29 September 2014 Archived from the original on 29 September 2014 AIADMK appoints Chinnamma VK Sasikala as party chief The Economic Times 29 December 2016 V K Sasikala appointed as AIADMK general secretary The Hindu 29 December 2016 a b AIADMK sacks Sasikala says Jaya is eternal general secretary Deccan Chronicle 12 September 2017 a b c AIADMK general council meeting Sasikala Dinakaran sacked Jayalalithaa to be eternal party head indiatoday 12 September 2017 TTV Dhinakaran has already been sacked says AIADMK meeting indianexpress 28 August 2017 TN court upholds decision to remove Sasikala as AIADMK general secretary Press Trust of India 11 April 2022 Retrieved 14 April 2022 via Onmanorama AIADMK merger Panneerselvam is Deputy CM gets finance portfolio The Hindu Chennai India 21 August 2017 a b Jesudasan Dennis S 22 August 2017 19 pro Dhinakaran MLAs withdraw support to Palaniswami The Hindu AIADMK launches TV channel News J to take on rivals The Indian Express 15 November 2018 Retrieved 1 February 2019 அ த ம க வ க க ப த ய ந ள ட ஜ யலல த ப றந த ந ள ல த டக கம maalaimalar in Tamil 18 January 2018 Retrieved 18 January 2018 Sasikala s plea against expulsion rejected by TN court 11 April 2022 a b Marriage of compulsion Why AIADMK is unlikely to break up with BJP despite public discord 9 June 2022 AIADMK attacks ally BJP says Modi govt policies against Tamils June 2022 BJP anti Tamil alliance is electoral adjustment says Ponnaiyan Archived from the original on 2 September 2022 Ponnaiyan accuses BJP of seeking to grow at AIADMK s cost The Hindu 31 May 2022 More voices emerge in favour of unitary leadership in AIADMK The Hindu 19 June 2022 Who Is Tamil Magan Hussain One Of AIADMK Founding Members Who Is Now Party Presidium Chairman abplive 23 June 2022 Tamil Magan Hussain Elected AIADMK Presidium Chairman Question Over Dual Chiefship ndtv 23 June 2022 Tamil Magan Hussain elected as AIADMK Presidium Chairman ANI 23 June 2022 AIADMK general council on July 11 to elect EPS as interim general secretary newindianexpress 5 July 2022 Tamil Nadu Indicating OPS is no longer AIADMK coordinator EPS says his letter on local body polls invalid indianexpress 30 June 2022 You are no longer AIADMK coordinator EPS tells OPS hindustantimes 1 July 2022 Ramakrishnan T 11 July 2022 Palaniswami elected AIADMK interim general secretary Panneerselvam expelled The Hindu ISSN 0971 751X Retrieved 13 July 2022 AIADMK Tussle Court Setback For OPS Rival EPS Takes Charge ndtv 11 July 2022 Sivaraman R 11 July 2022 Violence erupts near AIADMK party headquarters before general council meeting The Hindu ISSN 0971 751X Retrieved 13 July 2022 Sivaraman R 11 July 2022 AIADMK headquarters sealed following violent clash The Hindu ISSN 0971 751X Retrieved 13 July 2022 Jayalalithaa no longer AIADMK s eternal general secretary The Hindu 11 July 2022 ISSN 0971 751X Retrieved 13 July 2022 அ இ அ த ம க வ ல இர ந த ஓ ப எஸ ந க கம ப த க க ழ வ ல ச றப ப த ர ம னம indianexpress tamil in Tamil 11 July 2022 அத ம கவ ல ர ந த ஓப எஸ அன த த பதவ கள ல ர ந த ம ந க கம news18 tamil in Tamil 11 July 2022 AIADMK Tussle EPS Is New Boss Rival OPS Expelled ndtv 11 July 2022 Sec 144 Around AIADMK HQ in Chennai as Party Expels OPS After EPS Gains Control news18 11 July 2022 EPS faction elects RB Udayakumar as deputy leader of opposition to replace OPS thenewsminute Retrieved 19 July 2022 எத ர க கட ச த ண தல வர க ம ன ன ள அம ச சர ஆர ப உதயக ம ர ந யமனம dailythanthi in Tamil 19 July 2022 அத ம க அல வலக ச வ ய ஈப எஸ வசம வழங க ச ன ன உயர ந த மன றம உத தரவ news18 tamil in Tamil 20 July 2021 அத ம க அல வலக ச வ ய இப எஸ ஸ டம ஒப பட க க உத தரவ dinamani in Tamil 20 July 2021 அத ம க தல ம அல வலகத த ன ச வ ய இப எஸ ஸ டம ஒப பட க க உயர ந த மன றம உத தரவ hindutamil in Tamil 20 July 2021 Supreme Court dismisses OPS plea says sealing party office has consequences in democracy The Indian Express 12 September 2022 Retrieved 13 September 2022 S Mohamed Imranullah 17 August 2022 Setback for Edappadi Palaniswami as Madras HC orders status quo ante as on June 23 with respect to AIADMK leadership The Hindu ISSN 0971 751X Retrieved 18 August 2022 Sureshkumar 17 August 2022 Madras high court orders status quo in AIADMK affairs OPS is back as party coordinator The Times of India Retrieved 18 August 2022 AIADMK row Madras HC rules in favour of OPS fresh General Council to be held The Indian Express 17 August 2022 Retrieved 18 August 2022 Ops Evades Checkmate Aiadmk In Stalemate The Times of India 18 August 2022 Retrieved 18 August 2022 S Mohamed Imranullah 18 August 2022 Edappadi Palaniswami appeals against Madras High Court order in favour of O Panneerselvam The Hindu ISSN 0971 751X Retrieved 18 August 2022 O Panneerselvam calls for united AIADMK after court rules in his favour Edappadi K Palaniswami says he is power hungry The Indian Express 18 August 2022 Retrieved 18 August 2022 Palaniswami brushes aside Panneerselvam s appeal for unity The Hindu 18 August 2022 ISSN 0971 751X Retrieved 18 August 2022 அத ம க ப த க க ழ ச ல ல ம தன ந த பத உத தரவ ரத த News7 Tamil 2 September 2022 Retrieved 2 September 2022 Kohli 1990 p 162 Kohli 1990 p 163 The downfall of India s Mother politician BBC News 3 October 2014 Sivaraman R 30 September 2014 AIADMK cadre observe fast hold rail roko The Hindu Jayalalithaa stays in jail protests continue to rage in Tamil Nadu 1 October 2014 Archived from the original on 1 October 2014 Kumar B Aravind 6 December 2016 The enduring enigma that was Jayalalithaa The Hindu ISSN 0971 751X Retrieved 7 August 2020 For all her political success it s time to admit Jayalalithaa was no Amma Hindustan Times 17 February 2017 Retrieved 7 August 2020 Sudhir T S 4 December 2017 Jayalalithaa s Tainted Legacy and Where AIADMK Goes From Here The Quint Retrieved 7 August 2020 TN reports higher debt and fiscal deficit in 2021 budget experts say no reason for panic The News Minute 23 February 2021 Retrieved 4 April 2021 Freebie Culture Of DMK AIADMK Defies Basic Tenets of Dravidian Ideology 4 April 2021 Archived from the original on 4 April 2021 Retrieved 4 April 2021 Rs 5 7 lakh cr debt on people due to mismanagement charges LoP dtNext in 24 February 2021 Archived from the original on 27 February 2021 Retrieved 4 April 2021 TN interim budget Debt may touch Rs 5 70 lakh crore by March 2022 OPS attributes it to pandemic The New Indian Express Retrieved 4 April 2021 Tamil Nadu Assembly Election Results Election Commission of India Retrieved 15 November 2020 Puducherry Assembly Election Results Election Commission of India Retrieved 15 November 2020 Karnataka Assembly Election Results Election Commission of India Retrieved 15 November 2020 Kerala Assembly Election Results Election Commission of India Retrieved 15 November 2020 Andhra Pradesh Assembly Election Results Election Commission of India Retrieved 15 November 2020 Maharashtra Assembly Election Results Election Commission of India Retrieved 15 November 2020 Ahuja M L 1998 Electoral politics and general elections in India 1952 1998 New Delhi Mittal Publication ISBN 81 7099 711 9 Kohli Atul 1990 Democracy and discontent India s growing crisis of governability Canada Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 39692 1 Mahendra Singh Geetha Kamalakshi 2006 India votes Lok Sabha amp Vidhan Sabha elections 2001 2005 New Delhi Sarup amp Sons ISBN 81 7625 647 1 Murali Geetha Kamalakshi University of California Berkeley 2007 Tracing the signs Voter mobilization and the functionality of ideas in MI ISBN 9780549737612 Sinha Aseema 2005 The regional roots of developmental politics in India a divided leviathan IN USA Indiana University Press ISBN 0 253 34404 2 Thol Thirumaavalavan Meena Kandaswamy 2004 Uproot Hindutva the fiery voice of the liberation panthers 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