Tamizhaga Vetri Kazhagam (TVK) chief Vijay set the stage ablaze in Vellore’s Kollamangalam, prophesying a direct 2026 electoral collision with MK Stalin. Addressing party stalwarts, he recast the polls as a people’s war on corruption, sidelining the DMK’s dominance.
‘Picture this: Vijay and Stalin head-to-head, but truly, it’s Tamil Nadu against graft, against bribes, against DMK mismanagement,’ Vijay proclaimed, his voice booming with conviction. This narrative reframes the contest beyond personalities to systemic rot.
Insisting on local relevance over national distractions, Vijay tore into unkept DMK vows—monthly power bills morphed into costly bimonthly ones, dubbed ‘sleek corruption.’ He delved into societal pains: faltering policing, insecure women, isolated hill villages sans buses, healthcare scarcity compelling home births.
To fired-up workers: ‘Votes are inviolable rights for the whistle mark. We’ve wised up—no retreats, no dupes.’ TVK’s blueprint dazzled with safety nets for children, superior public schooling, sanitary provisions for females, drug elimination, and labor welfare innovations.
Mocking mercenary coalitions, Vijay declared, ‘Can’t clinch wins via stolen cash or wobbly partnerships—embrace whistle confidence for assured success.’ He threw a gauntlet: public asset disclosures for all leaders. Hailing 2026 as epochal, post-50-year inertia, he rallied, ‘My graft opposition draws fire. Convert booths to victory forts.’
Vijay’s clarion call hints at TVK’s rising tide, challenging entrenched powers with populist promises and anti-corruption zeal.
