By continuing, you agree to the Terms listed here. In case you want to opt out, please click "Do Not Sell or Share My Personal Information" link in the footer of this page.
Opt out of the sale or sharing of personal information
We won't sell or share your personal information to inform the ads you see. You may still see interest-based ads if your information is sold or shared by other companies or was sold or shared previously.
PUDUCHERRY: Among the 30 assembly constituencies in Puducherry, all eyes are on Thattanchavady segment as two chief ministerial candidates - AINRC's N Rangasamy and Congress V Vaithilingam - cross swords.
Both won eight times (Rangasamy contested in two constituencies in 2011 and won both, and again in two constituencies in 2021 and won one and lost the other), while Vaithilingam won six times from Nettapakkam and twice in Kamaraj Nagar. Only one can continue the winning streak this time.
Political leaders say Thattanchavady has long held the label of being a "chief minister's constituency." Rangasamy secured four consecutive victories here (1991, 1996, 2001, and 2006) before moving to other seats.
Vaithilingam, too faces significant hurdles: major allies, including CPI, CPM, and VCK, have openly declared they will not campaign for Congress, citing dissatisfaction with the seat-sharing process. DMK, a crucial partner, has remained largely passive, forcing Vaithilingam to rely almost entirely on his personal influence and Congress machinery.
Rangasamy wants to capitalize on the visible cracks within INDIA bloc. He is portraying the opposition as a "confused house" incapable of providing stable governance.
Meanwhile, Vaithilingam focuses on the alleged failures of govt. "The recent fake drug manufacturing scandal, the lack of development in Thattanchavady's industrial estate, and Union govt's delay in granting statehood show the inefficiency of the govt,'' says a Congress leader.
Political analyst Vai Bala, alias V Balasubramanian, said AINRC could have contested independently, without aligning with BJP, to gain greater mileage.
"This time it will be tough for Rangasamy. He is facing a Congress heavyweight in his own bastion. Rangasamy could not fulfil the demands of people seeking employment for the past 10 years and there is an anti-incumbency wave," he said.
Start a Conversation
Post comment