Amid swirling speculation about post-2026 election alliances in Tamil Nadu, Congress leader B. Manickam Tagore has put the power back in the hands of voters, countering DMK chief M.K. Stalin’s advocacy for single-party rule.
Stalin’s statement rejecting coalition demands from Congress in the event of a 2026 victory has sparked internal alliance friction. The CM argued that the state’s history supports dominant single-party governance.
In a sharp social media rebuttal, Tagore declared that Tamil Nadu’s electorate alone will dictate if it’s a solo party or coalition government. He insisted on letting democratic verdicts guide post-poll arrangements over premature announcements.
Drawing lessons from history, the MP revisited the 2006 polls: DMK won 96 seats but relied on outside support from Congress’s 34 MLAs, PMK’s 18, and CPI(M)’s 9 to finish its term without formal coalition.
Tagore criticized Congress’s then-leadership for not pushing for cabinet berths under Karunanidhi, calling it a pivotal missed step that stunted the party’s growth in the state.
With 2026 looming large, these exchanges signal potential rifts or realignments in the DMK-Congress pact. Will allies compromise on power-sharing visions? The unfolding discourse hints at a vibrant pre-election tussle shaping Tamil Nadu’s political future.