Tag: DMK

  • Exit polls 2021: West Bengal too close to call, DMK has cruising victory, LDF to enjoy second turn

    By Express News Service
    NEW DELHI: Chances of Mamata Banerjee’s Trinamool Congress retaining power in West Bengal appeared too close to call, while Assam is likely to give the BJP another shot at power, if exit poll projections on Thursday are anything to go by.

    In Tamil Nadu, exit polls predicted a crushing victory for the MK Stalin-led DMK, while the Pinarayi Vijayan-led LDF appeared comfortably ahead in the race to retain power in Kerala. As for Puducherry, exit polls put it in the BJP’s pocket.

    ABP News CVoter predicted the Trinamool getting between 152-164 seats, while BJP could get between 109- 121 in West Bengal. The Left alliance, including the Congress, is expected to get between 14-25. On the contrary, the Republic- CNX polls gave the BJP a slight edge by projecting 138-148 seats for the party in the 294-seat Assembly and 128-138 to the Trinamool.

    The eight-phase polls in West Bengal ended on Thursday evening. As for Assam, the BJP-led NDA is likely to beat antiincumbency to retain power. The India Today-Axis My India exit poll gave 75-85 of Assam’s 126 seats to the NDA.

    The Congress’s grand alliance is likely to win 40-50 seats, it predicted. In Tamil Nadu, the exit polls predict a landslide for the Opposition DMK alliance, giving it a staggering 165 of the 234 seats that went to polls.

    The AIADMK, which had the BJP as its ally, could end up end up with 66 seats. As for Kerala, the LDF is all set to retain power with the poll of polls predicting 84 to LDF, 54 to UDF and 2 to the BJP. If the India Today- Axis exit poll is to be believed, the LDF is expected to win around 104-120 seats, UDF 20-36, BJP 0-2 and others 0-2.

  • ‘EC must ensure level playing field’: Stalin supports Mamata, tells poll body to be neutral

    By PTI
    CHENNAI: Supporting West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee, DMK president M K Stalin on Tuesday said the Election Commission must ensure a level playing field for all parties and maintain impartiality.

    As Banerjee began a dharna in Kolkata to protest against the poll panel’s decision barring her from campaigning for 24 hours, Stalin said ‘faith in our democracy rests on free and fair elections.’

    In a tweet, the DMK chief said the EC “must ensure a level playing field for all parties and candidates and ensure that impartiality and neutrality is maintained.# Mamata Banerjee.”

    After the EC on Monday barred Trinamool Congress chief Mamata Banerjee from campaigning for 24 hours, her party claimed that the poll panel was behaving like a ‘wing of the BJP’ and alleged the decision smacked of authoritarianism.

    The poll panel’s order came after Banerjee’s remarks against central police forces and her statement, which allegedly had religious overtones.

  • AIADMK, DMK, Tamil Nadu’s key contenders for power leave fate to people

    By PTI
    CHENNAI: After fierce electioneering over a span of about four months, with a resurgent DMK eyeing capturing power and a determined AIADMK straining every nerve to retain power for the second time, Tamil Nadu is all set for the Assembly polls on Tuesday.

    The most intense in its electoral history and the first polls in the absence of stalwarts, AIADMK’s J Jayalalithaa and DMK’s M Karunanidhi, Chief Minister K Palaniswami, who is seeking a third successive win from Edappadi segment in his home district of Salem, steered his party’s hectic campaign.

    With women (3,19,39,112) outnumbering men (3,09,23,651), the 6.28 crore voters, which includes 7,192 third gender people, would decide the fortunes of 3,998 candidates.

    As many as 13 candidates, including BJP’s Pon Radhakrishnan and Vijay Vasanth of Congress are in the fray for the bypoll to the Kanyakumari Lok Sabha seat.

    Deputy Chief Minister O Panneerselvam, who too embarked on an aggressive campaign, is contesting again from his native Theni district’s Bodinayakanur constituency, where he emerged victorious in the 2011 and 2016 polls.

    The AIADMK leadership that began the campaign in December last, latched on to government’s ‘achievements’ like 7.5 per cent quota for government school students in medical admissions, successful COVID-19 management and poll promises like Rs 1,500 monthly assistance to families.

    The DMK’s poll plank was corruption charges against the government and 500 plus poll promises, including Rs 4,000 relief to COVID-19 hit rice ration card holders and legislation to earmark 75 per cent of jobs for locals.

    DMK chief M K Stalin, who spearheaded several campaign programmes against the ruling party, including the ‘We Reject AIADMK’ in December last and ‘people’s’ grama sabhas, vigorously toured the state to take on the ruling AIADMK.

    He is seeking reelection for the straight third term from Kolathur segment here.

    His son and party youth wing secretary Udhayanidhi Stalin is debuting from Chepauk- Triplicance constituency.

    For the first time, Makkal Needhi Maiam, founded in 2018 and led by actor-politician Kamal Haasan, is trying its luck in Assembly polls.

    AIADMK’s ally, BJP which is contesting in 20 constituencies, has made a serious bid to make a mark in the Assembly polls.

    Currently, the BJP has no MLAs in the Assembly.

    The saffron party conducted a ‘Vel’ yatra last year and claimed in its campaign that it had championed the cause of protecting the people’s sentiments.

    Its yatra prompted DMK chief Stalin to even hold a ‘Vel’.

    Several senior BJP leaders, including Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Union Home Minister Amit Shah and BJP national chief J P Nadda were among those who campaigned.

    Congress leader Rahul Gandhi toured Tamil Nadu with zest and covered many regions to woo voters, targeting the BJP for not ‘respecting’ Tamil culture and its ally, the AIADMK leadership, for ‘bowing’ before the Centre.

    The Congress, an ally of the DMK, is in the fray in 25 Assembly segments.

    Haasan is trying his luck from Coimbatore South, while BJP’s state unit president L Murugan and the saffron party’s Kushbhu Sundar are contesting from Dharapuram and Thousand Lights constituencies respectively.

    Another AIADMK ally PMK is contesting from 23 constituencies and is pinning its hopes on measures like the 10.5 per cent internal reservation for Vanniyars, a Most Backward Community.

    AIADMK’s rival Amma Makkal Munnetra Kazhagam, led by TTV Dhinakaran (contesting from Kovilpatti) and Nam Tamizhar Katchi of Seeman (Tiruvotriyur) made a determined effort to woo voters.

    DMDK, which walked out of the AIADMK alliance over not being alloted the number of seats it sought, is fighting the polls in alliance with AMMK.

    The state has 88,937 polling stations 1,29,165 ballot units, 91,180 control units (which comprise the Electronic Voting Machine) and an equal number of VVPAT (Voter Verifiable Paper Audit Trail) units.

    As many as 4,17,521 polling personnel are on duty and over 1.50 lakh security personnel, including those from state police, Central Armed Police Force, and home guards have been deployed.

    There are 10,813 vulnerable polling stations and 537 critical and webcasting is all set to be done from ’50 per cent’ of the polling stations.

    A total of Rs 428.46 crore worth seizures have been made in the run up to the polls, which includes a cash component of Rs 225.52 crore.

    There are 234 Assembly constituencies which goes for a single phase polls on Tuesday.

    AIADMK is in the fray in 191 segments (including allies who are contesting on AIADMK’s two-leaves symbol) and DMK is fighting from 188 constituencies (including poll partners who are contesting on DMK’s Rising Sun symbol).

    The DMK was in power during 2006-11.

    The AIADMK, then led by late Jayalalithaa, won the 2011 polls hands down and also went on to retain power in 2016.

  • Raiding opposition is BJP’s coping mechanism when facing electoral defeat: Rahul Gandhi

    By PTI
    NEW DELHI: Congress leader Rahul Gandhi on Friday said raiding the opposition is the BJP’s “coping mechanism” when it is facing defeat in elections.

    The Congress’ ally DMK condemned the Central government for alleged searches by income tax officials in the residence of party chief M K Stalin’s daughter Senthamarai in Chennai and claimed it has a ‘political objective’.

    However, income tax officials neither confirmed nor denied the searches.

    Taking to Twitter, Rahul Gandhi said, “Raiding the opposition is the BJP’s coping mechanism when facing electoral defeat.”

    Raiding the opposition is BJP’s coping mechanism when facing electoral defeat.
    — Rahul Gandhi (@RahulGandhi) April 2, 2021

    DMK General Secretary Duraimurugan said when parties were on the verge of completing the campaign and looked forward to the day of polling, the income tax searches in the residence of Senthamarai was done with a ‘political objective.’

    “The DMK is not a party that can be scared by such searches,” Duraimurugan said adding the party had already faced similar instances and it would not be deterred.

  • PM Narendra Modi should take COVID vaccine shot in public: DMK MP Dayanidhi Maran

    DMK MP Dayanidhi Maran said that PM Narendra Modi should take a COVID vaccine shot in public as such a move will give confidence to people.

  • Farmers protests: Delhi Police stops 15 Opposition MPs from reaching Ghazipur border

    By PTI
    NEW DELHI: Fifteen MPs from 10 opposition parties, including the SAD, DMK, NCP and the Trinamool Congress, were stopped by police from reaching Ghazipur border on Thursday to meet farmers protesting against new farm laws, a leader said.

    According to SAD MP Harsimrat Kaur Badal who coordinated the visit, the leaders were not allowed to cross the barricades and reach the protest site.

    Besides Badal, Supriya Sule from NCP, Kanimozhi and Tiruchi Siva from the DMK, Saugata Roy from the TMC were part of the delegation.

    Members of the National Conference, RSP and the IUML were also part of it.

    During a discussion in Parliament on Wednesday, several opposition parties asked the government to withdraw the three contentious farm laws without making it a prestige issue and not to treat the agitating farmers as “enemies”.

    Stringent security continued at Ghazipur on the Delhi-Uttar Pradesh border, one of the key protest sites where thousands of farmers are camping with a demand that the Centre repeal the new agri-marketing laws enacted last September.

    Meanwhile, nails that were fixed near barricades at the Ghazipur border were being repositioned, with security arrangment remaining same at the protest sites.

    “Videos and photos are getting circulated in which it’s shown that nails are being taken off Ghazipur. These are just being repositioned. Position of arrangement at border remains the same,” said Delhi Police.

    They recently cemented nails near barricades at Ghazipur (Delhi-Uttar Pradesh) and Tikri (Delhi-Haryana) borders.

    Also, police have heavily barricaded the Ghazipur border. Barbed wire and cement barricades have been planted on the roads to restrict the movement of the farmers.

    Farmers have been protesting against three of the Centre’s laws: Farmers’ Produce Trade and Commerce (Promotion and Facilitation) Act, 2020, the Farmers (Empowerment and Protection) Agreement on Price Assurance and Farm Services Act, 2020, and the Essential Commodities (Amendment) Act, 2020.

    Opposition leaders, including Kanimozhi, Supriya Sule and Harsimrat Kaur Badal, were stopped from reaching #GhazipurBorder.Express photo | @parveennegi1.#FarmersProtest pic.twitter.com/lFgs4qNYKO
    — The New Indian Express (@NewIndianXpress) February 4, 2021

    The protesting farmers have expressed the apprehension that these laws would pave the way for the dismantling of the minimum support price (MSP) system, leaving them at the “mercy” of big corporations.

    However, the government has maintained that the new laws will bring better opportunities to farmers and introduce new technologies in agriculture.

    Eleven rounds of formal talks between the government and the protesting farmer unions have failed to break the deadlock.

    While unions have stuck to their main demand of repeal of the laws and legal guarantee of MSP, the government has offered some concessions including keeping these laws on hold for 1-1.5 years.

    Even the Supreme Court has stayed the laws for two months and set up a panel to look into the matter.

    (With ANI Inputs)

  • Will ensure social justice in appointing HC judges: Ravi Shankar Prasad to DMK MP P Wilson

    By Express News Service
    CHENNAI: Union Minister for Law and Justice Ravi Shankar Prasad said that the department will take steps to maintain social justice in future appointments of High Court judges. His response came following a letter written to him by DMK Rajya Sabha MP P Wilson over the lack of social justice in the appointments of judges.  

    Prasad wrote a letter to Wilson stating that the appointment of judges of the Supreme Court and High Courts are made under Articles 124, 217 and 224 of the Constitution of India, which do not provide for reservation for any caste or class of persons. Hence, no caste, class or category-wise data is maintained. 

    “However, the government is committed to social diversity in the appointment of judges in the SC and has also been requesting the Chief Justices of HC, while sending proposals for the appointment of judges, for due consideration to be given to suitable candidates, minorities and women to ensure social justice,” he assured. 

    New Rules

    The government is committed to social diversity in the appointment of judges in the SC and has also been requesting the Chief Justices of High Courts, while sending proposals for the appointment of judges to consider suitable candidates, minorities and women