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BRS faces biggest crisis of its existence ever
The Hindu
BRS (TRS) faces biggest crisis with leaders defecting to Congress and BJP ahead of elections.
Bharat Rashtra Samithi (BRS), previously known as Telangana Rashtra Samithi (TRS), is facing the biggest crisis ever in its 23-year existence within four months of being thrown out of power. The party was at the helm of affairs in the newly-formed Telangana State for two consecutive terms.The view is becoming pronounced going by the series of defections of the party leaders to Congress and Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) seeking greener pastures and power ahead of elections to Lok Sabha.
Though crises are not new to the party, the present one appears to be toughest of them all as the party leadership struggles hard to swim out of the murky waters to stabilise it by regrouping and reorganising the organisation, sans the handle of Statehood sentiment which helped it overcome the two crises allegedly engineered by the then ruling Congress in the past. This time, both the ruling Congress and BJP are vying with each other in deflating the BRS as much they can before the Parliamentary elections.
Though several BRS MLAs and other senior leaders kept meeting Mr. Reddy and other Congress leaders immediately after the Congress Government assumed office on December 7 last, the migrations have picked up momentum after Telangana Pradesh Congress Committee (TPCC) president and Chief Minister A. Revanth Reddy said that it has lifted the gates to allow the exodus of leaders from the Opposition BRS. Initially, it was the leaders without any posts who started migration into BJP and Congress. Later, the sitting MPs, MLAs and MLCs joined the bogie.
Nearly four months after losing power in the State, several Zilla Parishad Chairpersons belonging to BRS have shifted their loyalty to the Congress with several urban and rural local bodies too going into the kitty of the ruling party. Four sitting MPs – B. Venkatesh Netha, B.B. Patil, P. Ramulu and G. Ranjith Reddy – have switched over to the Congress and BJP, and were renominated by the two parties to contest the Lok Sabha polls again.
“Such setbacks are not new to BRS (TRS) in its journey of over two decades. We are a movement party born with single-point agenda to press for Statehood to Telangana. After achieving the Statehood, our focus has been on protecting the interests of Telangana and working for its development, progress and welfare of people. Any day, we are the only party committed to protect the interests of the State as we don’t have any other obligations like the national parties do. Several attempts were made in the past too to decimate BRS, but it has risen like a phoenix every time”, says former MP B. Vinod Kumar, who is considered one of the intellectual faces of the party and now contesting for Karimnagar Lok Sabha seat one more time.
The ignominy for BRS leadership, however, has been refusal of Mr. Ranjith Reddy to contest Lok Sabha election from Chevella even after being asked to begin preparatory work and Ms. Kadiyam Kavya withdrawing from the lok sabha polls after announcement of her candidature by the BRS leadership. Interestingly, Ms. Kavya is being considered as the Congress candidate now from Warangal, the constituency for which she was picked up by BRS initially. While MLA Danam Nagender has already joined Congress and named as the latter’s candidate for Secunderabad Lok Sabha seat, another MLA Kadiyam Srihari and MP K. Keshava Rao are all set to cross the fence.
The exodus of BRS leaders into Congress and BJP is so high that the Congress has three candidates contesting Lok Sabha polls who were with BRS till recently. On the other hand, BJP has seven candidates who deserted BRS after the December 2023 Assembly elections and contesting the Lok Sabha polls now. And, another four who were associated with BRS till not long ago were also named by BJP to contest parliament elections.
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