Her Pack of Cards
Former VCK MLA Ravikumar says her frequent cabinet reshuffles (there have been six till January) and her constant moving of bureaucrats have been detrimental to continuity. The other effect it has had is that ministers, constantly insecure that they will be axed any day, indulge in amassing wealth fast. So, while she has worked at bringing the state out of the debt trap taking unpopular but necessary (most agree) decisions like raising power tariff, bus fare and milk prices, most of her ministers prefer being relegated to the background vis a vis the departments they handle.
At the end of the day, there might be 33 minister but only Jayalalitha counts for anything. Karunanidhi pointed out that the CM made 36 suo moto statements under Rule 110, while her cabinet colleagues made none! Karunanidhi, labelled her one year as CM as “one year of hardship”. His party has been most affected with 34,703 complaints of land grab received by the special cell she set up against DMK leaders and partymen. Jayalalitha has claimed that 1317.15 acres worth Rs 750 crore have been recovered and restored to rightful owners.
The last year has been miserable for Karunanidhi for other reasons too. His daughter, Kanimozhi was in jail and only got bail in November. Raja, came out this week after 15 months in jail after being arrested for his alleged involvement in the 2G scam. Delhi got a taste of the veneration leaders get in TN.
The One that Got Away
AIADMP MP V Maitreyan cribbed this week that at a photo session to mark the 60th anniversary of the first session of Parliament last Sunday, front row seats were reserved only for leaders from major parties. He said that the formula was different for Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha MPs. Thus if a party had four members in LS, it got a front row seat whereas only if a party had eight MPs in the RS, they could sit in front. In other words with AIADMK having only five RS members, he became a backbencher!
But none of the MPs from Tamil Nadu – there are 40 in LS, 18 in RS and two are nominated – remembered to see that 91-year-old T.M. Kaliannan, member of the Provisional Parliament, was invited. Kaliannan lives in Kumaramangalam village in Namakkal district, and was a member of the Provisional Parliament, which functioned till the first general election in 1952. “I had the honour of listening to tall leaders such as Dr Rajendra Prasad, Jawaharlal Nehru, Sardar Patel, Shyama Prasad Mukherjee, Dr B.R. Ambedkar and N Gopalaswamy Ayyangar,” he says remembering he was just 28 years old at the time.
Members of his family informed senior leaders, but he got no invitation, although he’s probably the only surviving member of the Provisional Parliament. Kaliannan became a member representing the Congress after P Subbarayan resigned on being appointed Indonesia’s Ambassador in 1949.
His political debut was in Loyola College campus politics. “In 1939, I was part of the students’ delegation which met Mahatma Gandhi at Wardha. “We went there to seek his permission to go on a strike to condemn the Vice-Chancellor for criticizing students’ involvement in politics. We even stayed there for nearly 10 days but eventually Gandhiji did not give us the nod for a strike,” he recalls.
When his tenure of the Provisonal Parliament ended, Kaliannan became an MLA representing Rasipuram in 1952 and Tiruchengode in 1957 and 1962. He became an MLC between 1973 and 1979. After a couple of electoral losses, he quit politics, and went back to his village. He spends his time reading English and Tamil newspapers, gets involved with temple activities and interacting with youth. “I encourage discussion with them on anything but politics”, he says. For someone who honed his political skills watching Gandhi, Nehru and Ambedkar, he must be disillusioned with today’s crop of politicians.