Was it lack of nerves that kept Jayalalitha out of the Pudukottai campaign?
N Sathiya Moorthy in Madras
Doctors say Jayalalitha Jayaram has sciatica, but the man on the street,
particularly her AIADMK cadres, are sceptical, if not downright
rude. They attribute her health problems not to stretched nerves,
but to lack of nerves in facing the Pudukottai voters, who are
voting in an assembly by-election on Saturday, February 8.
That Jayalalitha has been suffering from a series of physical
ailments is known for sure. She is known to have been suffering
from arthritis and spondilitis, both nerve-related problems,
apart from thyroid deficiency. Given the secrecy that has gone
into her health condition from the days she entered politics under
the late M G Ramachandran, all kinds of rumours had come to be
spread.
Though the general mood is one of sympathy for the ailing leader
who was admitted to the Apollo Hospital on Sunday -- where she has been
advised rest -- it's the timing that has upset her cadres. The
AIADMK is expected to fair badly at Pudukottai, and none expected
Jayalalitha to campaign for the party.
Senior party leaders found excuses for the party not to contest the by-election, promising
instead, all material help.
What has added to Jayalalitha's woes is her cancelling encounters with
the cadres from the districts soon after the poll debacle last year.
An elaborate programme was chalked out for the
purpose and disillusioned-yet-loyal cadres came from the districts
in large numbers on the first two days. What she heard at the
closed-door exchanges and outside the her Poes Garden home
upset Jayalalitha so much that she took ill. The programme was postponed,
never to be revived.
"We would not have been demoralised had she not
planned the Pudukottai trip in the first place," says one AIADMK
leader. But unlike many others, he is
convinced that she meant to visit Pudukottai and is not faking
an illness. "She knows from the MGR example how important
it is for her to be in good health if she wants to fight back in
politics. MGR's robust health used to be part of any discussion
at village tea-shops," he says.
One party insider told this correspondent that she is not faking ill-health.
"She has made it amply clear in the past nine
months that she is here to stay and fight back. She doesn't want
to yield, and there is no question of her fighting shy of
meeting the masses. If it is not today, it has to be some day,
and you cannot wish it away. And more than anyone else, Jayalalitha
knows it better."
The AIADMK seems to have lost the Pudukottai battle
even before it had begun. None expected the party to win the seat --
which the ruling DMK won by a 42,000 vote margin last year --
in the company of the Tamil Maanila Congress. The TMC is
still with the DMK, and both party leaders, namely M Karunanidhi
and G K Moopanar, have been campaigning together for the ruling
party candidate.
Even if the AIADMK candidate had won a couple of thousand
votes more than last year, observers say that would have
been a morale-booster for the party.
"Now we are in danger of being pushed to third place,"
says the AIADMK leader, quoted earlier. ''Voters in the state expect party leaders
to come to them, seeking their votes, and Jayalalitha's absence
will be construed as her fear of the people. Against this, Marumalarchi
Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam leader V Gopalswamy has been
in the field from day one. It would have been a different story
if Jayalalitha had not announced her campaign plans in the first
place, saying she had court cases to prepare for."
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