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Fractured legacy

The ruling AIADMK and Jayalalithaa's estranged heirs battle for control of the late CM's iconic residence, Veda Nilayam

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Fractured legacy
Peace offering: Palaniswami (left) and Panneerselvam pay tribute to Amma after the factions merged in Aug. 2017.

The puratchi thalaivi (rev­­o­lutionary leader), J. Jaya­lalithaa, passed away in December 2016, barely seven months after her party, the All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (AIADMK), won the assembly election for the second time in a row in Tamil Nadu. The party and the state went through much turmoil after her death, including Jaya’s friend and confidante V.K. Sasikala’s emergence as a successor, her (some say convenient) incarceration in a decades-old disproportionate assets case, the coming together of the breakaway faction led by O. Panneerselvam and the official Edappadi K. Palaniswami group (some say BJP-engineered), and the latter’s ascent to the chief minister’s chair. But through it all, one thing was clear, ‘Amma’, as Jayalalithaa was fondly called, still cast a long shadow even after her death. As another assembly election (April 2021) draws near, the AIADMK is again invoking her name. Seeking a third consecutive term in power, the party, now led by Chief Minister Pala­niswami, is banking on its governance record, the slew of Amma welfare schemes and “her legacy” to carry them through.

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