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While it was Karunanidhi and MGR (M G Ramachandran) who held sway over the masses in the initial phase, later it was the DMK veteran and MGR’s protege late J Jayalalithaa.
Incidentally, the year 2016 saw both Jayalalithaa and Karunanidhi recede from limelight as she died after 75 days of hospitalisation in December, while the DMK chief suffered illness from which he never recovered fully till his demise.
Karunanidhi, known for his trademark baritone, lost his voice owing to a tracheosteomy procedure, and he subsequently faded away from active politics with his public appearances becoming rare till his death aged 94 last evening.
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Following his ascent to the Chief Minister’s chair for the first time in 1969 following the death of incumbent and DMK founder C N Annadurai, Karunanidhi enjoyed unbridled success till 1972 when the charismatic Ramachandran decided to play spoilsport.
Kicked out of DMK following his differences with Karunanidhi, Ramachandran, popularly known as MGR, floated AIADMK and in the 1977 general elections steered his party to a massive win against DMK.
Since then, the state politics was dominated by the two individuals till MGR’s death in 1987 and the trend of bi-polar politics continued for next four decades with Jayalalithaa emerging as the new rival to Karunanidhi.
Though the AIADMK split post-MGR’s demise, Jayalalithaa unified the two factions to take forward his legacy.
Observers of Tamil Nadu politics are of the view that Karunanidhi may have suffered reversals in electoral terms on many occasions, but was never down.
In the political spectrum dominated by Jayalalithaa and Karunanidhi, leaders like Vijayakant of DMDK made some noise making impressive electoral shows.
However, their short-lived glory proved time and again that the bi-polar nature of Dravidian politics was intact. The exit of Karunanidhi and Jayalalithaa from the scene, however, seems to have created a political vaccum in the state politics.
Observers are of the view that it would be a challenge for any leader to match their charisma and political influence and hence the personality-driven politics of the state could come to an end.