The Hindu (Hyderabad)

Firebrand Adivasi woman teacher takes on seasoned politician­s in Adilabad LS

- Ravi Reddy

BJP working hard to retain the seat, Congress giving a close ‚ght and BRS on the defensive. Whether the Modi magic will prevail yet again in the 2024 Lok Sabha elections in this tribal constituen­cy or will the Rahul Gandhi charisma and promises outwit the sa‰ron party, May 13 voting will tell

The Congress, BRS and BJP are leaving no stone unturned to come out victorious in the LS elections

Tribal-dominated Adilabad ST reserved constituen­cy bordering Maharashtr­a is all set to witness a keen triangular †ght between the ruling Congress, the main opposition Bharat Rashtra Samiti (BRS) and the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) with all parties leaving no stone unturned to come out victorious in the prestigiou­s Lok Sabha elections on May 13.

Rank new comer and a tribal teacher Atram Suguna of the Congress will be making her political debut and take on seasoned politician Godam Nagesh, former Minister and ex-MP of the BJP and former MLA Atram Sakku of the BRS in the tribal heartland where the Adivasi versus the Lambada sub-section of the ST †ght is serious. Interestin­gly, all three candidates are Adivasis thus †ghting among themselves to split the in£uential community votes. This leaves the parties to woo the Lambadas, who can make or mar the chances of any party.

The total electorate of Adilabad parliament­ary constituen­cy is 16,45,857 with 8,42,888 women voters outnumberi­ng men who constitute 8,02,882. There are 87 transgende­r voters in the constituen­cy.

Since the formation of the constituen­cy in 1952, in the 18 general and byeelectio­ns, the Congress candidates have won eight times, followed by the TDP (six times), the BRS twice, the Socialist Party nominee once and the BJP candidate trouncing the Congress and the BRS in 2019 elections. In the 2019 elections, Soyam Bapu Rao, sitting BRS MLA joined the BJP and won the election securing 3,77,374 votes against BRS nominee Godam Nagesh (3,18,814) and Congress party’s Ramesh Rathod (3,14,238). The 2019 elections had witnessed a no holds barred †ght among the Adivasis and Lambadas as the former demanded removal of the latter from the ST list claiming they all migrated from neighbouri­ng Maharashtr­a, where they are listed as BCs.

Earlier in the 2014 election, Godam Nagesh of the BRS defeated Congress candidate Naresh Jadhav with a margin of 1.71 lakh votes to enter the Parliament for the †rst time. In that election the TDP and the Bahujan Samaj Party candidates stood third and fourth and the BJP was nowhere in the picture.

But the equations have changed fast this time. Mr. Nagesh, who was with the BRS till recently, switched sides and joined the BJP to bag the ticket. While the sitting MP Soyam Bapu Rao was left sulking over denial of ticket, the party †nds solace in the fact that out of the seven Assembly segments it won Mudhole, Adilabad, Nirmal and Sirpur. The BRS won Boath and Asifabad while the Congress won Khanapur. The last three segments are reserved for the STs.

Numericall­y speaking, the BJP is seen as sitting pretty in the constituen­cy riding high on the Ram Mandir issue which the party claims has percolated down to the rural areas particular­ly the tribal hamlets called Tandas and Gudems. The sa¢ron £ags £uttering above the modest dwellings gives an indication of the systematic work the sa¢ron brigade of the party and its frontal organisati­ons have worked.

General perception among voters in the constituen­cy is rather than the candidate it is Prime Minister Narendra Modi and the BJP which matters. The presence of four BJP MLAs in the parliament­ary constituen­cy only boosts the chances of the party candidate in this election.

The BRS after its Assembly election loss has faced a crisis of sort in the district with several of its key leaders deserting the party. Former MLA Koneru Konappa of Sirpur joined the Congress and so is the case with others in Mudhole, Adilabad, Nirmal and Asifabad constituen­cies, where the BRS is bereft of leadership. Only saner face of the party is Jogu Ramanna, former Minister, who is going all out to improve the chances of the party nominee. For Congress, it has managed to †nd a new face in Atram Suguna, a †rebrand Adivasi woman leader. At the height of the statehood issue and the anti-Lambadas agitation, Suguna played a key role. Her pro-people tilt is bound to stand in good stead in terms of securing votes. But a section of Congress leaders are worried that the Lambada vote bank may not fully back the party given her strong opposition to the community during the anti-Lambadas stir.

The Congress campaign is centred round the six guarantees and how the Revanth Reddy government managed to ful†l them in the †rst three months. Though with only one MLA, the party is not leaving any chances and it hopes to boost its chances with direct defections from the BRS into the party. The BJP is banking heavily on Mr. Modi’s popularity while BRS claims it is the party that will protect the interests of the State.

Whether the Modi magic prevails yet again in the 2024 Lok Sabha elections in this tribal constituen­cy or the Rahul Gandhi charisma and promises outwits the sa¢ron party, May 13 voting will tell.

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