Friday, June 10, 2011

POLITICS: TAMIL NADU Caped In A New Style Strength of numbers and a flattened DMK let Jaya keep her combativeness on a leash PUSHPA IYENGAR

NIRMAL
The Softer Amma Jayalalitha consoles the widow of N. Mariyam Pitchai, a minister in her cabinet who was killed in a road accident
POLITICS: TAMIL NADU
Caped In A New Style
Strength of numbers and a flattened DMK let Jaya keep her combativeness on a leash

No Fights, Just Work

  • For now, Jayalalitha isn't indulging in vendetta politics
  • She's concentrating on making the administration effective. Law and order is a priority area.
  • Promises to end power crisis
  • Some freebies she promised are already being rolled out

***

Given her history of unpredictability, and considering it's only about a fortnight since she took office, it's much too early to reach a definite conclusion about J. Jayalalitha's behaviour as the new chief minister. Even so, there are many who say that, compared to how she conducted herself during her 1991 and 2001 stints, she comes across so far as mellowed down, far from arrogant, mature, relaxed, even witty.

Significantly, she is keeping in check her proclivity for vendetta. She has, of course, demanded what politicians usually demand—the resignation, for instance, of Union textiles minister Dayanidhi Maran of her rival party, the DMK, for involvement in the 2G scam—and taken some jibes at the party itself. But she has not said a word against her No. 1 enemy, DMK supremo and former chief minister M. Karunanidhi, who she had had arrested in 2001, rather roughly and past midnight. Perhaps it's because his daughter Kanimozhi is in jail in the 2G spectrum scam case and Jayalalitha wants to show she is sensitive to his grief. More likely, it's because the DMK has been decimated—23 MLAs in a house of 234—and needs no more beating down.

Jayalalitha's focus instead is on governance. Law and order and letting the police do its job is a priority. On her second day in office, she lectured her 32 ministers, of whom 24 are rookies, on "believing in the development mission". "We thought she might concentrate on going after corrupt DMK leaders," says one minister. "But she is focused on her development mission." These 'mission' meetings continued for two weeks, during which she outlined her vision. She has also appointed a minister for implementation of special programmes.

Freebies remain a staple, as with the previous regime. On June 1, she unveiled a flagship programme that promises 20 kg free rice monthly to some 1.86 crore families and will increase the food subsidy by Rs 400 crore from the present Rs 4,000 crore per annum. She has doubled the pension for the aged, the handicapped and deserted or destitute women to Rs 1,000 per month. Other handouts: six months' maternity leave for government employees; Rs 25,000 plus four grams gold in marriage aid for poor, educated women; Rs 50,000 plus four grams gold in marriage aid for poor women with diplomas; and increased assistance for fisherfolk.

The more-populist-than-thou battle with Karunanidhi, too, continues: free mixies, grinders and fans for women, laptops for Std xi, xii and college students, four sets of uniforms and a pair of shoes for schoolchildren. Manufacturers are gleeful at the thought of the money to be made if they win tenders, as were colour TV makers during the DMK regime. Jayalalitha had also promised in the AIADMK manifesto 300 sq ft houses, each costing Rs 1.8 lakh, to three lakh bpl families, and cows and sheep for certain categories of bpl families.

In the new regime's early weeks, there's no end to the shuffling about of the state's 300 IAS and 175 IPS officers. Thirty of the state's 32 districts have new collectors. Jayalalitha has made it a point to retain U. Sahayam in Madurai, who was brought in by the Election Commission to curb the influence and muscle of Karunanidhi's son M.K. Azhagiri before elections. Till the postings are settled, Jayalalitha's avowed commitment to development and industrial growth might prove difficult to realise.

 
 
So far, she hasn't hit out at rival No. 1, former CM Karunanidhi. He in turn has asked his cadres to back 'good endeavours'.
 
 
The chief hindrance, though, comes from the power deficit of some 3,000 MW per month (generation is 7,300 MW), resulting in hours of load-shedding in cities and rural areas. Tamil Nadu's focus on renewable energy sources has won it prizes—wind power being the biggest such source, and private players the chief contributors—but that's unlikely to bridge the deficit. Moreover, small plants (800 MW or less) are threatening to stop generation unless tariffs are revised. Solar power is the solution Jayalalitha seems to have hit upon. "Making rainwater harvesting mandatory brought many benefits to the state during her earlier term, and the thrust on solar power will do the same," says an AIADMK leader. But experts say solar power generation is hugely expensive. Will her promise of three-phase connections across the state in four years prove a tall order? True to her character, she has hinted at a "surprise", apparently to be revealed in the governor's address. But this much stands: the power situation is an area of concern; even her electoral ally, Vijayakanth of the dmdk, stresses on this.

The new regime has also rushed into controversy by putting off the Samacheer Kalvi (uniform school curriculum), unifying syllabuses of the state and other school boards, and to be introduced for Std ii-v and Std VII-X from this academic year. Jayalalitha says this DMK government idea won't improve the quality of education. Her decision is likely to cost the state some Rs 200 crore, for over nine crore textbooks of the unified syllabus have already been printed. Karunanidhi, to whom, or to whose writings, there were references in some textbooks of the new syllabus, says, "If Senmozhi, the song I penned for the World Classical Tamil Conference last year, was the reason for shelving the syllabus, there's no harm in removing my song and name and retaining the syllabus."

Already, pils have been filed against the government on the new syllabus and on her working from Fort St George instead of the new Rs 1,100-crore assembly complex that was Karunanidhi's pet project, saying that both decisions cause losses and much inconvenience. Are these signs of confrontation ahead, in which, badgered by her opponents, she would revert to striking back in overreaction?

Too early to say. For now, the media is charmed by her promise to give the opposition space, which even prompted Karunanidhi to ask his cadres to "cooperate on good endeavours". The media is also happy with her weekly press conferences. At the one held last week, she answered questions patiently. She has a vote of confidence from her friend Narendra Modi, who too of late has been recasting himself: "There are only two camps in India—those committed to development and those committed to vote banks. Jayalalitha is committed to development." Five years to prove that.

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DAILY MAIL
JUN 09, 2011 11:38 PM
9

"Mummy" is doing a good job & showing a lot of vigour in her work,while the hard-working part wasalways there, the marked & subdued approach & less vendetta seem to have awe-struck the people. If she maintains this tempo, the Parliamentary elections will be a clean sweep.Who knows, we could see NaMo as PM & JayJay as Dy.PM

HARI
CHENNAI, INDIA
JUN 08, 2011 06:56 AM
8

It is her last chance to establish herself in the minds of the people as a benevolent Administrator and Ruler in return for that massive mandate of confidence  she got from them. To begin with,  she should throw away the pettiness and the vengeful attitude, she always carried in her mind against the DMK's boss M.K.  But Amma's actions in the first few days after taking over the reigns of administration suggest that she has not cast away from her mind the antipathy  even to the slightest extent she has towards M.K.  She is moving like a Bull Dozer pulverizing left and right whatever he did in his tenure, good or bad that, ofcourse always under his watchful eyes, filled his personal coffers also.  A 'Md.Bin.Thuglak' attitude, casting a doubt whether that 'Chennai Thuglak' is behind all these moves, pulling the appropriate strings!  She must know that her arch enemy MK is over for all purposes. The DMK, badly bruised in the elections and the family members of it's boss badly hit by corruption scandals that threatens the very existence of their future political lives is no more a force to reckon with, a fact which Amma should understand and mind her affairs with the intent and purpose to give a good administration for the people to earn their gratitude. If she fails, well Kodanad is there for ever.

SAMIRAJAN
PORTLAND, UNITED STATES
JUN 07, 2011 09:19 AM
7

 Vinod must ask his Mami to write about the state and the needs of the state and not use the column as proganda platform,we all know that Mami is in love with Amma as much as any Admk party worker.But cant she enumerate about Daya and Aircel deal.Mami has just not bothered to go into the deal as the readers wait for fresh inputs regarding the deal and all the allegations being made out against Daya.Instead Mami just goes on and on about what her perception about Amma and her wisdom ,not forget the drubbing DMK got.I have nothing in this whole dam election results,what little i know is that the people voted Mk out for the 2G loot and not to have Amma back.

WRONGONE
CHENNAI, INDIA
JUN 06, 2011 12:43 PM
6

Amma has lost weight....she looks a little lean.... VLCC perhaps.

JO MB
KOLKATA, INDIA
JUN 06, 2011 10:22 AM
5

 when the DMK is getting beaten up in Newdelhi by 2G scam and newer skeletons keep coming out weekly, what is the need for jayalalaitha to start off her new stint by going after the DMK exclusively? CBI is already doing the job for her and the election results have proved that the message had reached the people.  so she would lie low and accumulate facts of wrong doings by the previous regime and take appropriate action on a low key basis when the 2G Scam looks like winding down.

OUTLOOKJAI
CHENNAI, INDIA

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