Chennai: Coming out of her self proclaimed political sanyas, the expelled former interim general secretary of the AIADMK, VK Sasikala, is apparently making a determined bid for re-entry into the party. For this, her preferred vehicle is nothing more than audiotapes. Rattling the present dispensation under Edappadi K Palaniswami (EPS), she has been unleashing a flurry of audio conversations with party functionaries and the cadre across the state. Not a single day passes without a few phone conversations being released.
“I will come and make things straight. The party is going astray and it cannot be allowed any further,” continues to be her message through those she is speaking to. This has sent alarm bells ringing in the AIADMK, forcing the leadership to crack the whip and launch a purge by expelling 17 members, including a former MP and a party spokesperson. But, this had not deterred her from further releasing more tele-conversations.
The timing she has chosen to test the political waters is also significant. For, the AIADMK is still struggling to come to terms with the loss of power which has accentuated the factional feud between EPS, now the AIADMK legislature party leader, and O Panneerselvam, his deputy. The election of office bearers for the legislature party witnessed prolonged wrangling with OPS having to concede and accept the reality of the party's drift from being a southern Thevar-dominant one to a western Goundar dominant one. Of the 66 AIADMK legislators in the 234-member Assembly, nearly 56 are from the western region from where EPS hails while the south has come a cropper. As such, EPS has gained an increasing grip over the party despite the loss of power.
Also read:New audiotapes of Sasikala surface on social media
What more could be an opportune moment for her to make a comeback and emerge out of her self imposed exile? Having tasted political power for long, she was only expected to break her sanyas anytime. As the confidant of the late Chief Minister and AIADMK supremo J Jayalalithaa, she had kept the party under her thumbs since the early 90s till she was imprisoned in a disproportionate wealth case in February 2017. On her release from Bengaluru, a month ahead of the Assembly poll, she received a rousing reception and she declared her intention of taking the political plunge. But, even earlier, soon after the demise of Jayalalithaa, she was all set to ascend the Chief Ministerial gaddi only to be halted by the Supreme Court sending her to prison.