Sunday, May 10, 2026

Reflections on Tamil Nadu Election


 

Tamil Nadu is often viewed through a North Indian political and media lens that fundamentally misunderstands the state’s political culture. Across ideological lines — whether BJP, Congress, or even sections of the Left — there appears to be a shared preference for a “pan-Indian” political framework that sits comfortably with the North Indian mainstream. The outer skins differ, but the underlying impulse remains similar: weaken Dravidian and Tamil nationalist politics while elevating Vijay as a supposedly “national” political figure.

 

That sentiment occasionally surfaces without disguise. A TVK MP from a Brahmin stronghold recently proclaimed that “the Dravidian parties are gone,” while another TVK woman MLA chose to speak in Hindi in order to “spread” Vijay’s fame. In Tamil Nadu, such gestures are not politically neutral. They carry symbolic significance in a state whose modern political consciousness was shaped by linguistic assertion and resistance to cultural homogenization.

 

This is where the larger challenge for Vijay begins. Tamil Nadu neither needs nor historically embraces a carefully packaged national alignment masquerading as regional politics. The state’s electorate has repeatedly preferred political formations rooted in Tamil Nadu’s own social realities, economic priorities, and political temperament. Vijay should not mistake electoral enthusiasm for an endorsement of pan-Indian politics. If anything, the long-term decline of both Congress and BJP in Tamil Nadu demonstrates the limits of that model.

 

Sections of the North Indian media continue to exaggerate every shift in Tamil Nadu politics as proof that the state is finally “merging” into the national political mainstream. That interpretation remains deeply flawed. A closer look at voting patterns still shows Dravidian and Tamil nationalist forces retaining the larger political share. The current fluctuations may yet prove temporary before the electorate returns to its familiar political equilibrium.

 

People remain critical of mainstream Dravidian parties for corruption, stagnation, and administrative decay. Yet it is equally true that they have historically functioned as a political firewall against forces many Tamils continue to regard with deep suspicion. Their failures are undeniable, but so too is the role they have played in keeping certain ideological tendencies away from Tamil Nadu’s political courtyard.

 

At the same time, the election results reveal another troubling trend: the renewed rise of caste-centered politics. The decline in Dravidian party performance in parts of rural Tamil Nadu cannot be understood without acknowledging the aggressive mobilization of caste identities. Both the Left and the Right have increasingly resorted to caste calculations for electoral consolidation, and the strategy has yielded results. That development should concern anyone invested in Tamil Nadu’s social fabric.

 

Yet there is also an irony within this moment. Vijay’s cinematic appeal appears to have interrupted, at least temporarily, the steady growth of overt religious polarization that had intensified over the past two decades. A Catholic by birth, born to a Catholic father and a Hindu-converted Catholic mother, and married to a Hindu wife, Vijay drew support across religious and social lines. Among major political formations, only NTK under Seeman displayed a similarly diverse voter base.

 

It is for that reason that, despite strong disagreements with Seeman — particularly his exaggerated rhetoric and borderline racial attitudes toward other communities — I would still have preferred to see his party gain seats over either Congress or BJP. At the very least, Seeman deserves acknowledgment for fielding an equal number of women candidates, something none of the major parties matched.

 

Kamal Haasan’s political experience should serve as a warning. Rajinikanth, for his part, often used the possibility of political entry as a recurring punchline to sustain public curiosity and boost his films’ appeal. After his clashes with J. Jayalalithaa — the formidable AIADMK leader and former chief minister — he may have been warned, intimidated, or at least politically sobered. Jayalalithaa occupied a unique space in Tamil Nadu politics. She was perhaps the only major Dravidian leader who drew support both from the Dravidian masses and the Brahmin middle class, partly because of her own social and cultural background(s). Kamal Haasan entered politics only after Jayalalithaa’s death, at a time when his cinematic fame was already declining and media attention around him had diminished. He soon discovered that Tamil Nadu’s electoral politics is not sustained by spectacle alone. His fans from the peak of his stardom had matured by then; they approached politics through the pragmatic lens of realpolitik rather than cinema-like fantasy.

 

Then the comparisons between MGR and Vijay are misplaced. MGR emerged from a deeply rooted social-revolutionary political movement and entered power after years of political engagement. Vijay, by contrast, appears to have risen through a social-media-amplified cut-out culture built largely on public frustration with corruption and aging political leadership.

 

There is also an economic reality often ignored amid populist enthusiasm. Under continuous Dravidian rule, Tamil Nadu evolved into one of India’s strongest economic engines, particularly in comparison with much of the North. Today, the state attracts migrants seeking employment, industrial opportunity, and social stability. In such a context, extravagant populist promises cannot merely be romanticized; they must also be financially sustainable. Even MGR, a teetotaler who once promised otherwise to women voters, ultimately relied on TASMAC revenue to sustain governance.

 

For that reason, Vijay’s political trajectory may prove shorter than many currently assume, particularly if it depends on a fragile coalition. Public reactions to his inauguration already hint at the limits of symbolic miscalculation in Tamil Nadu politics. In this state, optics matter. When Tamil Thai Vaazhthu appears secondary to the Sanskritized Bengali Vande Mataram at the inauguration, when a politically diminished Congress leadership plays the role of symbolic kingmaker for a handful of seats at the same ceremony, and when personal controversies overshadow political messaging, such as the absence of his children and separated wife while the actress widely rumored to be central to his personal controversies is prominently positioned as the function’s second star, such imagery inevitably shapes public perception, and that perception inevitably shifts.

 

None of this is rooted in personal hostility toward Vijay. It is simply a recognition that Tamil Nadu’s political culture remains more historically grounded, self-aware, and politically distinct than many outside observers, and perhaps even some within the state, are willing to acknowledge.

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