“It would be good for both Tamil Nadu and the country if parties that rely primarily on fear-based narratives gradually lose their monopoly over political discourse.”
Meanwhile BJP :
-Batenge to katenge
-Mangalsutra cheen lenge
-Aapki bhains cheen lenge
The BJP's growth in Tamil Nadu will remain limited as long as Dravidian parties dominate the political landscape.
Their continued relevance rests on keeping alive a politics of fear, grievance, and perpetual victimhood, convincing voters that Tamil identity is constantly under threat from North India and that every national issue is a battle for cultural survival. The BJP, in particular, is portrayed as a force bent on imposing Hindi and erasing Tamil identity, a narrative that has served as a convenient political shield for decades.
That is why Tamil Nadu's politics needs disruption. The emergence of TVK is one such disruption. More parties are needed that move the debate away from identity anxieties and towards governance, jobs, investment, infrastructure, education, law and order, and aspirations for the future.
Annamalai could potentially create another such disruption by building a platform that is not burdened by the BJP label in Tamil Nadu while retaining many of the same governance-oriented ideas. It would be good for both Tamil Nadu and the country if parties that rely primarily on fear-based narratives gradually lose their monopoly over political discourse.
If Annamalai's departure from the BJP is part of a broader strategic understanding, which seems possible given how amicable the separation appears, it could prove to be an excellent long-term move. If, however, he left out of dissatisfaction with how he was treated, then it is a significant loss for the BJP.
@saltzandpepper1 It happened to me when I was 10 or 11 maybe. I got slapped by my mother and my left ear was buzzing for a week. Sometimes felt like someone whistling. Got disappeared in two weeks.