Close Menu
  • HOME
  • TAMIL NADU
  • CHENNAI
  • NATION
  • WORLD
  • BUSINESS
  • SPORTS
  • ENTERTAINMENT
  • EDIT
  • COLUMNS
    • POINTBLANK
    • WHY TN IS FORBIDDEN LAND
  • MIXED BAG
    • CLIMATE & WEATHER
    • EDUCATION
    • HEALTH
    • JOBS
    • LEGAL
    • LIFESTYLE
    • SCIENCE
    • TECHNOLOGY
  • E-PAPER
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Threads YouTube
  • About us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
Saturday, June 27, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
News Today | First with the newsNews Today | First with the news
Login / Register Subscribe
  • HOME
  • TAMIL NADU
  • CHENNAI
  • NATION
  • WORLD
  • BUSINESS
  • SPORTS
  • ENTERTAINMENT
  • EDIT
  • COLUMNS
    • POINTBLANK
    • WHY TN IS FORBIDDEN LAND
  • MIXED BAG
    • CLIMATE & WEATHER
    • EDUCATION
    • HEALTH
    • JOBS
    • LEGAL
    • LIFESTYLE
    • SCIENCE
    • TECHNOLOGY
News Today | First with the newsNews Today | First with the news
  • E-PAPER
  • POINTBLANK
  • PRIME PULSE
  • TN ECHOES
  • FIFA 2026
  • DEEP DIVE
  • GLOCAL
  • COLD FACTS
  • LEADING LIGHTS
  • CRYSTAL GAZING
  • PATTERNS
Home » Humpty, Dumpty have a great fall
POINTBLANK

Humpty, Dumpty have a great fall

T R JawaharBy T R JawaharMarch 3, 1998No Comments
🌐 Translate ▾
  • Tamil
  • Hindi
  • Malayalam
  • Kannada
  • Telugu
Share WhatsApp Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Telegram Copy Link Email

THE GREAT INDIAN CIRCUS

Humpty, Dumpty have a great fall

Never has a slap in the face been so loud and pronounced. The people of Tamilnadu, with one decisive sweep of their hand have not only demolished the formidable facade put up by the DMK and TMC, but have also spat on the face of the pranksters, sorry pollsters by making clowns out of them, besides, of course relegating the voice of Arunachalam to oblivion.

To say that AIADMK supremo Jayalalitha has humbled her betenoirs and beaten them at their own game would be an understatement. This is an emphatic victory for a bold and shrewd political strategy on her part, which included rallying under her umbrella all the anti-DMK forces, consolidating the ground swell of support in her favour and effectively driving home the misdeeds of the DMK government to the masses. The attempts now by a section of the ‘loaded’ media to rob her of the credit for the victory by claiming that this was a vote for a national party and the State Assembly elections would be different, are nothing but mean and vain bids to hide the mud on their moustaches. Jayalalitha has clearly and squarely knocked her opponents down at the hustings and the people have cheered her all the way to triumph, as her front’s massive sweep would bear out.

And now to the obituary. The DMK is a party which is long dead. There could be little doubt that it is the most hated outfit in the State. Yet the party managed to amble to centrestage twice owing to a fractured opposition once (1989) and an alliance that reaped it more gains than it deserved the next time (1996). The vote for the DMK has never been a positive vote that emanated from a love for the party; on the contrary, it has always been the case of an unsuspecting underdog getting catapulted to power owing to the mistakes of its opponent. Reason why the people of the State have never hesitated to reinstate the AIADMK at the earliest opportunities made available to them. Also the reason why the DMK has never been able to perpetuate its farcical supremacy for more than two years, by which time the facade melts down to reveal the skeletons and ugliness inside.

For the self-appointed sole leader of the Tamil race, it is indeed an ignominy that his rhetoric that enlivens film buffs and partymen has miserably failed to arouse the people’s faith. Evidently, the voters had decided to beat hollow Karunanidhi’s tall claims about a clean government, a secular society and above all a secure and peaceful atmosphere in the State. They have chosen to negate, through a silent revolution, pages and volumes of flowery abuses hurled by the Thaanai Thalaivan at his sworn enemy. But all along it has been only the hollowness and utter hypocrisy of his averments that had been on view. The emperor thought he was fully robed. The people however knew he was…

It would have been most unfortunate and distressing had these pioneers of pillage and patent holders of scientific corruption been allowed to continue their sermons on the ills of sleaze. It would have been a tragedy had these abetters of the LTTE, who paved the way for terrorism to play havoc with even national interests, under the guise of ethnic and linguistic affinity been given a sanction for all their unholy past as exposed by Jain. It would have been even more disastrous, as the State has now come to realise, had these torchbearers of the Al-Umma brand of secularism been allowed to carry on their version of non-communal politics that rendered the State and its populace sitting ducks to the wily designs of fundamentalist maniacs, who thrived owing to the ruling party’s Nelson’s eye. That the people have unanimously decided to avert such catastrophe is a pointer to what is brewing in the State’s political cauldron and which is certain to manifest itself even more markedly when the Assembly elections dawn.

The rout of the TMC and its degenerations from a giant to just a rump would go down in the State’s political history as the biggest bubble gone bust. The inseparable duo of Thaanai Thalaivan and Thanmana Thalaivan, have been clearly exposed as mere ‘political soap bubbles trying to wreak vengeance in a vacuum’ with no perceivable positive agenda of their own. The TMC owed its origin and existence to its one-point programme of baiting Jayalalitha and its foolhardy belief that it could sustain itself on that count alone has now landed it in an abyss. The TMC’s failure to capitalise on the jackpot of 1996 and its conscious decision to stay in the inglorious company of the DMK speak volumes of the party leadership’s palpable lack of courage and foresight.

And when Sonia took the plunge, the party still had a chance to salvage its pride and identity and reaffirm its sworn loyalty to its leader’s legacy, but for some strange reason it preferred to cling to its dubious companion, who stood indicted for being responsible for the death of that very leader. Add to this betrayal of their leader’s memory, the complacency that marked its electoral campaign and the utter contempt and haughtiness with which it treated its allies, would be clear as crystal that the TMC has none but itself to blame for the mother of all debacles. The party now finds itself inextricably entwined to the DMK, having been a willing partner to all of the latter’s sins and there is no way it can now seek to distance itself from its ally having already sacrificed its honour and credibility. Their refrain should now be ‘united we fall and together we sink’. And it is time the dhotis are sent to the cleaners.

We wonder where our Nero, sorry hero, has gone fiddling flaw, even as his friends are burning in agony and shame. Probably the word is yet to reach the cool climes of Nepal or the buzzing HK. But we are sure he would soon realise that it is not the rooster’s crowing that ushers in the dawn.

email the writer to [email protected]

Share. WhatsApp Facebook Twitter Telegram Copy Link Email
Previous ArticleOf quotes and misquotes
Next Article Hitting democracy below the belt

Related Posts

POINTBLANK

The Great Indian Exam Betrayal: When Merit Becomes a Mockery

June 1, 2026
COLUMNS

JANTA JIBES, JOLTED JUDICIARY & INSECT INSURGENCY

May 23, 2026
POINTBLANK

When the Rupee Falls, the Faultlines Surface

May 22, 2026
POINTBLANK

Gen Z Says Cheers to Abstinence: Why the Peg is Losing Its Punch

May 14, 2026
POINTBLANK

The 850-MP Circus: More Lung Power, Less Loo Space

April 17, 2026
COLUMNS

Dyarchy to Deadlock – Part V

January 30, 2026
0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Login
Notify of
guest
guest
0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Latest Posts

India honours fallen heroes

NT BureauJune 26, 20260

In a significant and solemn development, the Government of India has, for the first time, officially disclosed the names of six armed forces personnel who were killed in action during Operation Sindoor, a cross-border military operation conducted in May 2025.

CM Vijay to chair conference of IAS, IPS officers 29 June 

NT BureauJune 26, 20260

A two-day conference of senior civil and police officials, including IAS, IPS and IFS officers, will be held on June 29 and 30 at the State Secretariat in Chennai under the leadership of Chief Minister Vijay.

MDMK signals possible exit from DMK alliance

NT BureauJune 26, 20260

Speculation is mounting over a potential political shift in Tamil Nadu, as the Marumalarchi Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (MDMK), led by Vaiko, is reportedly considering an exit from the DMK-led alliance.

TN govt cancels tender linked sanitation privatisation plan

NT BureauJune 26, 20260

In a significant policy reversal, the Tamil Nadu government has cancelled a tender that was floated to prepare a feasibility report on the privatisation of sanitation services across 12 municipal corporations in the State.

235 dead, 4,300 injured in Venezuels earthquakes

NT BureauJune 26, 20260

Venezuelans searched for survivors beneath collapsed buildings Thursday and rescue teams raced to northern areas rocked by a pair of powerful earthquakes that officials say killed around 235 people and left at least 4,300 people injured.

About
About
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram RSS
Latest Posts
  • India honours fallen heroes
  • CM Vijay to chair conference of IAS, IPS officers 29 June 
  • MDMK signals possible exit from DMK alliance
  • TN govt cancels tender linked sanitation privatisation plan
  • 235 dead, 4,300 injured in Venezuels earthquakes
© 2026 NewsTodayNet.com. All Rights Reserved. Designed & Maintained by Gifted Technologies.
  • About us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

wpDiscuz
Ad Blocker Enabled!
Ad Blocker Enabled!
Our website is made possible by displaying online advertisements to our visitors. Please support us by disabling your Ad Blocker.

Sign In or Register

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below.

Prove your humanity: 6   +   2   =  
Lost password?