Udhayanidhi Stalin with his father, DMK chief M.K. Stalin, and that AIIMS brick | Twitter/@Udhaystalin
Udhayanidhi Stalin with his father, DMK chief M.K. Stalin | Twitter/@Udhaystalin
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New Delhi: With leads showing a win for the DMK’s ‘rising sun’ symbol, there will be a new focus on the party’s ‘rising son’ too. Party chief M.K. Stalin’s son, Udhayanidhi Stalin, grabbed headlines when he took on Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Home Minister Amit Shah during the campaign and dodged the AIADMK’s jibes and the dynasty darts.

eading in 120 of the 234 seats in the state. The majority mark is 118. 



A political newbie

To ensure his first political outing was a success, Udhayanidhi, the actor-turned-politician, was often seen campaigning in his constituency under the watchful eye of MP Dayanidhi Maran, picking up babies and folding his hands in front of the elderly as he was showered with flowers. 

Despite being the butt of many jokes of the AIADMK’s IT wing, the DMK youth wing leader emerged as one of the star campaigners in the Tamil Nadu elections. 

He hit the ground running in early 2020 and then relentlessly campaigned across the state. Be it his encounters with the police for flouting lockdown rules or his challenge to Modi-Shah to come after him instead of his sister, during IT raids against her, Udhayanidhi showed he meant business.

His constituency of Chepauk-Thiruvallikeni, or Chepauk-Triplicane as it is known, is historically associated with his grandfather, the late chief minister M. Karunanidhi, who held the seat between 1996 and 2011. 

Responding to jibes of being the crown prince

Udhayanidhi took a number of jibes in the stride, questioning where BJP stalwarts L.K. Advani or Yashwant Sinha were, when Prime Minister Narendra Modi called him a crown prince. 

He also took on Modi when he campaigned with a brick, supposedly of the AIIMS Hospital near Madurai that Modi had promised in 2016 but never came up. Taking a jibe at the BJP, he said this was all Modi had to show for the hospital.  

Even though he faced much flak for perpetuating dynasty politics after he was made the youth wing president of the DMK, party members say he is a true ‘people’s leader’.

“He knows the ground reality and is sailing along just like his grandfather and father,” senior DMK leader S.S. Palanimanickam told ThePrint. “He is a very simple man. And never shows that he is above the public which is what people identify with.” 

On whether it was too soon for Udhayanidhi to become a minister, A. Panneerselvam, author of Karunanidhi: A Life, said, “He is 44 years old. How is it too soon? His grandfather became CM when he was 44.” 

(Edited by Arun Prashanth)



 

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