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After 50 years with AIADMK, Sengottaiyan joins Vijay’s TVK in first major defection to Tamil star’s party

The 9-time MLA’s home turf of Gobichettipalayam could become TVK’s first winnable constituency in the 2026 Assembly polls other othan Vijay’s own

K A Sengottaiyan joined the Thamizhaga Vetri Kazhagam (TVK) in the presence of party leader Vijay. (Source: PTI)K A Sengottaiyan joined the Thamizhaga Vetri Kazhagam (TVK) in the presence of party leader Vijay. (Source: PTI)

K A Sengottaiyan, one of the longest-serving figures in the AIADMK and a nine-time MLA from Tamil Nadu, formally joined actor Vijay’s Tamizhaga Vettri Kazhagam (TVK) on Thursday in a move that signals the new party’s first major political induction since its formation. His entry came a day after he resigned as MLA from Gobichettipalayam, ending a 50-year association with the AIADMK.

Arriving with supporters at Vijay’s Panaiyur office in Chennai’s suburbs, the 77-year-old was appointed organisation secretary for four western districts of Tamil Nadu — Coimbatore, Erode, Tiruppur and the Nilgiris, which is a region where Sengottaiyan retains a personal vote bank and organisational influence.

Vijay released a video message welcoming him. “At just 20 years of age, he believed in MGR and joined his movement. In that young age, he took on the significant responsibility of becoming a legislator. From then on, throughout his journey, he remained in public life as a trusted figure to the two towering leaders of that movement — MGR and Jayalalithaa. After being part of the same movement for 50 years, Sengottaiyan’s political experience and his contributions on the field will be a great strength to our Tamilaga Vettri Kazhagam. With that belief, I welcome everyone who joins hands with him and works with us in service of the people,” Vijay said.

For TVK, a party built largely on Vijay’s popularity and a young supporter base rather than a political cadre, this marks a turning point. Until now, TVK did not have a single seasoned politician capable of independently securing 20,000–30,000 votes in an Assembly constituency. Sengottaiyan’s home turf of Gobichettipalayam could become TVK’s first winnable constituency besides Vijay’s own expected debut, making the veteran potentially the party’s second “assured seat” in 2026.

Political observers say the move also hardens the previously ambiguous relationship between TVK and AIADMK. While Vijay has consistently criticised DMK and BJP in sharp tones, he had so far avoided directly attacking the AIADMK and regularly invoked its icons — Annadurai, MGR, and Jayalalithaa — with reverence. Sengottaiyan crossing over closes the door on speculation of a TVK–AIADMK alliance, a scenario that had quietly unsettled the DMK, which viewed such a partnership as the only formula capable of meaningfully threatening its dominance in the upcoming polls.

Months of friction

Sengottaiyan’s exit follows months of public friction with AIADMK general secretary Edappadi K Palaniswami, popularly known as EPS. On September 5, he openly urged EPS to readmit expelled leaders including O Panneerselvam, TTV Dhinakaran and V K Sasikala, warning that failure to reunify the movement would lead to further electoral collapse. The response was swift: he was stripped of organisational posts within hours and later expelled altogether, accused of violating party discipline.

That move came after months in which EPS, convinced Sengottaiyan lacked ground influence beyond Gobi and would fade politically, adopted a strategy of sidelining him rather than confronting him. The veteran’s Delhi outreach, reportedly encouraged by a Union minister and an RSS leader, also fell flat, further weakening his leverage.

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In response to his switch, BJP state president Nainar Nagendran said the BJP has not given any promise to anyone. “How can it be right, how can it be appropriate, for someone to say that they stayed in the AIADMK trusting the BJP? Sengottaiyan joining TVK will not create any impact on the AIADMK–BJP alliance. It would not be fair to comment on their internal party problems,” he said.

Former AIADMK leader Pugazhendhi, however, was more pointed. “My best wishes to Sengottaiyan. Sengottaiyan joining TVK will add strength to Vijay and that party. Vijay has been praising MGR and Jayalalithaa. TVK should give Sengottaiyan the respect he deserves. Those who have left the AIADMK are not going to unite again.”

He blamed EPS for creating confusion in the party. “If this continues, the future of the AIADMK itself will become a question,” he said.

For Sengottaiyan, once respected for proximity to MGR and Jayalalithaa but increasingly marginalised under EPS, the move may be both a final act aimed at continued relevance and a symbolic bridge between Dravidian-era organisational politics and Tamil Nadu’s newest political brand built on cinema stardom, digital mobilisation, and first-time voters.

Arun Janardhanan is an experienced and authoritative Tamil Nadu correspondent for The Indian Express. Based in the state, his reporting combines ground-level access with long-form clarity, offering readers a nuanced understanding of South India’s political, judicial, and cultural life - work that reflects both depth of expertise and sustained authority. Expertise Geographic Focus: As Tamil Nadu Correspondent focused on politics, crime, faith and disputes, Janardhanan has been also reporting extensively on Sri Lanka, producing a decade-long body of work on its elections, governance, and the aftermath of the Easter Sunday bombings through detailed stories and interviews. Key Coverage Areas: State Politics and Governance: Close reporting on the DMK and AIADMK, the emergence of new political actors such as actor Vijay’s TVK, internal party churn, Centre–State tensions, and the role of the Governor. Legal and Judicial Affairs: Consistent coverage of the Madras High Court, including religion-linked disputes and cases involving state authority and civil liberties. Investigations: Deep-dive series on landmark cases and unresolved questions, including the Tirupati encounter and the Rajiv Gandhi assassination, alongside multiple investigative series from Tamil Nadu. Culture, Society, and Crisis: Reporting on cultural organisations, language debates, and disaster coverage—from cyclones to prolonged monsoon emergencies—anchored in on-the-ground detail. His reporting has been recognised with the Ramnath Goenka Award for Excellence in Journalism. Beyond journalism, Janardhanan is also a screenwriter; his Malayalam feature film Aarkkariyam was released in 2021. ... Read More

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