Chennai: After the AIADMK was voted out of power in the state assembly election, the leadership crisis in the party has resurfaced with the facade of the diarchy vanishing into thin air.
The election of the Legislature Party leader on Monday has turned out to be a fight to the finish between former Chief Minister Edappadi K Palaniswami (EPS)and his rival and former Deputy Chief Minister O Panneerselvam (OPS).
It was a fight to the finish and the factional war has spilled on to the streets as well. OPS found himself to be a loner unable to stomach the humiliation.
It was yet another proof of EPS increasing his vice-like grip over the AIADMK, making it clear that even in defeat he can't brook any challenge to his authority.
Of the 75 seats won by the AIADMK combine, the Dravidian major alone secured 66 seats of which 40 were from western Tamil Nadu, popularly called as the Kongu region.
EPS, who belongs to the dominant OBC Gounder community of this region, has consolidated his hold effectively erasing the perception that the AIADMK is a party of the Thevars, the dominant OBC community in southern Tamil Nadu.
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Adding to his woes, OPS could only retain his seat in Bodinayakkanur in his native Theni district where the AIADMK was routed.
The presence of TTV Dhinakaran's AMMK in the electoral arena has cost the AIADMK dearly in the south. And unlike EPS, who campaigned in all the 234 constituencies, OPS was mostly confined to his seat.
Yet, after the results were out on May 2, OPS staked his claim to be the Leader of the Opposition.
Some of his close aides in the party, including party deputy coordinator, KP Munusamy and a few former ministers were engaged in negotiations to convince EPS who stayed put at Salem.
However, EPS was unrelenting to cede any more political space to OPS. Meanwhile, he had won over a few MLAs from the south, leaving OPS little room for manoeuvre.