Behind TDP’s Spectacular Comeback, YSR Congress’s Complete Neglect of Development in AP

With TDP-Jana Sena-BJP alliance winning 164 out of 175 seats in the Andhra Pradesh assembly, YSR Congress is not in a position to even secure opposition status.

Hyderabad: The Telugu Desam Party-led National Democratic Alliance in Andhra Pradesh has registered a landslide victory, winning 164 out of 175 seats in the Andhra Pradesh legislative assembly. While TDP romped home with 135 seats, its alliance partners Jana Sena and the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) secured 21 and eight seats respectively.

The tally of the ruling YSR Congress, headed by chief minister Jagan Mohan Reddy, came from 151 seats it had bagged in the 2019 elections to a mere 11 seats. The magnitude of the TDP-Jana Sena-BJP alliance meant Reddy would not be even in the position to get opposition status in the assembly.

All the parties in the fray reflected the same performance in Lok Sabha elections as well. While TDP secured 16 seats, its alliance partners Jana Sena and BJP secured two and three seats respectively. The YSR Congress bagged four seats.

Expressing shock at the results, an emotionally charged Jagan wondered at his maiden media conference in the last five years where the affection shown by beneficiaries of welfare programmes initiated by his government vanished.

He said he did not imagine this kind of result. He said he lost the election despite doing a lot for people.
Jagan also said god alone knew what went wrong and expressed his helplessness at the juncture. “I will rise up from here and take to struggles which is nothing new to me. I am ready for any challenge.”

Jana Sena chief Pawan Kalyan in his address to party supporters said he was at a loss for words. The results reflected the people’s ambition for change. This was not the time for taking revenge on political rivals, he added.

Telugu Desam Party president N. Chandrababu Naidu participated in a cake-cutting celebration at the Jana Sena office. He left for Delhi to take part in the NDA meeting on Wednesday called by Prime Minister Narendra Modi and other BJP bigwigs. His presence at the NDA meeting, more or less, end speculation about his speculation in the BJP-led National Democratic Alliance (NDA). But, the exit of Naidu from NDA during his previous term is a grim reminder of his blow-hot, blow-cold relationship with the BJP in the past. He decided to leave NDA protesting against the failure of the Centre to concede special category status to residuary Andhra Pradesh in the wake of the bifurcation of the erstwhile State.

The TDP and Jana Sena raced to lead in no time as soon as counting of votes began on Tuesday morning even as the ruling YSR Congress struggled to take off. As the trend continued, 23 out of 25 ministers in chief minister Jaganmohan Reddy’s Cabinet and Speaker Tammineni Sitaram trailed behind their TDP rivals.

It was obvious after a while that Jagan was set to exit and pave the way for Naidu to take the former’s seat in power again. Naidu was by then well on his way to winning his seventh Assembly election and with it becoming chief minister for the fourth time. Jagan conceded defeat later and sent his resignation letter to governor S. Abdul Nazeer.

A look at the reasons for the debacle of the YSR Congress shows that the welfare schemes of the party on which it banked heavily did not work with voters. The tall claims of the government that a sum of over Rs 2.75 lakh crore was spent on the welfare of the poor by direct benefit transfer (DBT) did not convince the public. Also, the ‘volunteer system’, initiated by the Jagan Reddy government, to take welfare to the doorsteps of people without having to go around government offices was ignored by people. The system had become hugely controversial as it was perceived as a parallel mechanism to village secretariats.

On the flip side, the YSR Congress is to blame itself for the defeat due to the lack of investments and development in the state. The three-capital model proposed by the government at Amaravati, Kurnool and Visakhapatnam representing the three regions of the state did not go down well with people. Finally, the state ended up without a clear capital. It was too late by the time he announced that he would run the government from Visakhapatnam in his second term.

The failure of the government to complete the Polavaram project citing faults in design and its firm resolve to implement the Andhra Pradesh Land Titling Act amidst serious concerns of the public on security for their lands were cited as reasons for YSR Congress’ defeat.

Naidu tore up land revenue records at public rallies, symbolically rejecting the government’s authority over private lands. All the Opposition parties highlighted that the Act would become another Dharani portal of the Telangana government lacking transparency and protection of land rights.

The TDP also promised ‘Super Six’ guarantees of Rs 4,000 pension per month, Rs 15,000 assistance to every school-going child, three free cooking gas cylinders for every household per annum, unemployment allowance of Rs 3,000 per month, free bus ride to women and Rs 1,500 per month to all women from 18 to 59 years. They seemed to steal a march over YSR Congress promises.

Jagan in the YSR Congress manifesto promised to continue all the welfare schemes of the past five years. He hiked social security pensions marginally from Rs 3,000 to 3,500 per month and assistance to school-going children from Rs15,000 to 17,000.

The arrest of Naidu and his imprisonment in Rajahmundry Central Jail for nearly 50 days in an alleged scam of skill development programme during his chief ministership from 2014 to 2019 earned him a lot of public sympathy, particularly women who took to road in Guntur.

A political analyst Pentapati Pulla Rao told The Wire that what worked in the victory of TDP and its allies was their unity. The public made it clear that freebies were not enough. Naidu promoted unity among allies by compromising on seats sought to be contested by TDP. The TDP gave 21 Assembly seats to the Jana Sena and 10 to BJP.

The TDP also conceded six parliament seats to BJP and two to Jana Sena. Pulla Rao highlighted that it was the severe oppression of Opposition parties by Prime Minister Modi which promoted their unity at the national level.

Another analyst Telakapalli Ravi said the fact that Jagan replaced 70 incumbent MLAs was a clear indication about the prospects of his party’s defeat. “Otherwise, why will any party change so many MLAs? It was a desperate attempt to save a sinking boat.”

Ravi also said TDP was expected to fight because of serious anti-government feelings among the masses. Also, the vengeance politics of Jagan to book Naidu in a criminal case and send him to jail and targeted violence by YSR Congress against TDP leaders and cadre spelt danger to the party. Jagan distanced himself from government employees by not looking into many of their demands.

Naidu, however, breathed life into the BJP by forging an alliance. It drastically changed the scenario at the national level. If he and BRS president K. Chandrasekhar had gone with the INDIA bloc, it would have made a vast difference to the results.

Pawan Kalyan was a game changer by consolidating the Kapu vote bank, Ravi added. YSR Congress replaced 70 out of its 153 incumbent MLAs with the experience of Bharat Rashtra Samiti in Telangana  Assembly elections. It was believed that the BRS lost polls because of its reluctance to change its MLAs after they had become unpopular.

On the other hand, the TDP retained all its 23 MLAs. The TDP also fielded runners-up on its behalf in 50 seats contested by the party in the last Assembly elections.

The TDP swept polls in Guntur, Krishna, Srikakulam, Vizianagaram, Kurnool and Nellore districts. Together with its ally Jana Sena, the party also made a clean sweep in East and West Godavari districts where the Kapu community held considerable sway. Pawan Kalyan who heads Jana Sena represents the community. The TDP also enjoyed the blessings of the Kamma community represented by Naidu.

Will Pawan Kalyan’s Yatra Prove Decisive in Andhra Pradesh?

While the actor-politician will undoubtedly draw crowds, it remains to be see if the Jana Sena Party can convert the support of his fans and the Kapu community into votes for the Telugu Desam Party.

Hyderabad: Jana Sena Party (JSP) supremo and popular actor Pawan Kalyan has sounded the political bugle in Andhra Pradesh for the assembly election in 2024. He is all set to begin his roadshow from East Godavari district on Wednesday, June 14. Interestingly, the first phase of the ‘Varahi Yatra’ will cover 11 key assembly segments where a potentially crucial and captive Kapu caste vote bank is concentrated. While there will undoubtedly be huge crowds, will the actor-politician be able to convert this support into actual votes this time around and transfer them to the benefit of the Telugu Desam Party (TDP)?

Pawan Kalyan in the recent past has repeatedly declared that he will ensure anti-incumbency votes are not split. As part of this effort, he joined hands with the TDP and an alliance between them seems a foregone conclusion now. In fact, the surprise meeting between TDP president N. Chandrababu Naidu and Union home minister Amit Shah in New Delhi is being seen as the fruition of Kalyan’s efforts to build a united opposition to take on chief minister Y.S. Jagan Mohan Reddy and the YSR Congress Party (YSRCP). The JSP and BJP are already in a formal alliance. 

Projecting strength for a better deal?

While the JSP officially contends the yatra is meant to consolidate its base, highly placed sources within the party say it is also a show of strength to negotiate a better deal in future seat-sharing discussions. “The JSP got about 5% vote share in 2019. The crowds that will turn up during the yatra will most definitely help us punch above our weight and negotiate a better deal during seat-sharing discussions,” the source told The Wire

The TDP thinks otherwise. “We don’t think exerting pressure on us is the agenda of the yatra. Pawan Kalyan has always been clear from the beginning about a YSRCP-mukt Andhra Pradesh. In fact, he was quite accommodating during the informal alliance talks. Moreover, he has said publicly that the JSP’s strength is limited and cautioned his fans and supporters to understand the ground reality and make practical demands,” TDP spokesperson K. Pattabi told The Wire

The JSP contested 137 of 175 assembly segments in 2019. It retained its deposits in only 16, winning just one seat. Interestingly, the 11 segments to be covered in the first phase of the yatra are from these 16 segments. This suggests a conservative approach, attempting to consolidate the party’s strengths before venturing into other districts. Pattabi thinks this is a good decision. “Even the late YSR [Jagan’s father Y.S. Rajasekhara Reddy] started began his padayatra in 2003-4 from his stronghold of Idupulapaya,” he told The Wire

Pawan Kalyan and N. Chandrababu Naidu on January 8, 2023. Photo: Video screengrab

Will the Kapu vote consolidate behind JSP and help TDP?

Pattabi is also confident that the Kapu community, to which Kalyan belongs, will consolidate behind the JSP. Therefore, the TDP will also benefit from a vote transfer. “Jagan Mohan Reddy has always ignored certain communities like the Kammas [the TDP’s core voter base]. He doesn’t even bother to appeal to them. He is doing the same with the Kapu community. Cabinet minister Kodali Nani even said recently that they don’t care for Kapu votes,” he told The Wire

According to JSP leader Panchakarla Sandeep, both the delta districts of East and West Godavari are strongholds of the party. “Pawan Kalyan has many fans in this belt. Moreover, there is substantial support from Kapus here. But we also have support among the backward communities like Setti Balija and Agnikula Kshatriya (fishermen). Even forward castes like the Kshatriyas support us,” he told The Wire

Raju Raviteja, a former JSP leader who co-authored the book Ism with Pawan Kalyan detailing the party’s political ideology, believes otherwise. “Kalyan’s attempts to garner Kapu votes against Jagan is a non-starter. At the ground level, Kammas and Kapus are political rivals. It will be a challenge for him to convince them to work together. Moreover, the Kapus feel Pawan Kalyan will sell their interests to the TDP,” he told The Wire.

YSRCP national media advisor Devulapalli Amar agrees with Raviteja. He asked why the Kapus will carry Naidu’s palanquin. “First, Kapus do not vote as a monolith. Second, they will not agree to a combination which will make Naidu the CM, which means they will not work wholeheartedly on the ground for some other leader’s victory. Finally, they know Naidu’s history of political betrayals and the treatment he meted out to the Kapu community after he became the CM in 2014. So, they will be very cautious of him,” he told The Wire

When asked if the JSP is aware of these challenges, Raju Raviteja said that Kalyan is “too close” to him to “have an objective assessment of the situation”, since his style of leadership is “too impulsive”. 

Also Read: Why a Meeting Between Amit Shah and Chandrababu Naidu Says a Lot About BJP’s Fears

What about the fans?

Raju Ravitej believes Pawan Kalyan’s fans are his biggest liability. “His fans are unruly and violent. While Kalyan goes around trying to convince people to vote for him, the behaviour of his fans is convincing people to vote against him. He takes one step forward while his fans push him two steps backwards,” he said.

He added: “Of course, he can rein in his fans to some extent. But he doesn’t want to do that because he wants them to chant his name and use this support to consolidate his position in his own party and overcome elements that rebel against him. Kalyan takes control through organised chaos and the tragedy is that this beats his own organisation hollow, giving him a pyrrhic victory of sorts.”

This raises an important question about Kalyan’s capability to have control over his MLAs if he does manage to win a few seats. Will he be able to stop them from jumping ship to the TDP or YSRCP? In fact, the party’s lone MLA in the current assembly, Rapaka Varaprasad, also distanced himself from the party and is now closely associated with the ruling YSRCP.

Why does the Kapu vote matter?

It matters for three reasons. One, it is estimated that the Kapus constitute about 15-17% of the state’s population. Two, they are desperate for political power and feel a sense of indignation that they have been deliberately kept out of power by the Kammas and Reddys. Three, they are concentrated in geographical pockets with an especially high concentration in East and West Godavari. 

The third reason is crucial. A high concentration of vote share in a particular geography tends to convert into a disproportionately high number of seats. This is usually explained by psephologists using the Cube Rule. It refers to a principle in political science that applies to electoral systems using the first-past-the-post (FPTP) method. 

More specifically, the ratio of seats won by a political party to the total number of seats is approximately proportional to the cube of the ratio of the number of votes won by the party to the total number of votes. 

For instance, this is evident in Karnataka, where the BJP’s vote share has consistently been less than the Congress’s. Yet, the saffron party has sometimes managed to win more seats – simply because its vote base, like the Lingayat community for example, is concentrated in certain large pockets of the state. But the Congress vote bases are spread thinly across the state. 

With the TDP and the Kapu community desperate for power, Pawan Kalyan and his ‘Varahi Yatra’ might prove to be decisive in Andhra Pradesh. 

Y.S. Jagan Reddy Sworn in as Andhra Pradesh CM

Reddy was congratulated on Twitter by both Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Congress president Rahul Gandhi.

Amaravati: Y.S. Jaganmohan Reddy, who led his YSR Congress Party to a thumping victory in the assembly elections, was sworn in on Thursday as chief minister of Andhra Pradesh.

Governor E.S.L. Narasimhan administered the oath of office and secrecy to the 46-year-old leader, whose party emerged victorious in 151 seats in the 175-member state assembly.

The YSR Congress decimated the TDP headed by N. Chandrababu Naidu, who became the first chief minister of the state after it was bifurcated to carve out Telangana five years ago.

The YSRC also won 22 of the 25 Lok Sabha seats in the state in the recently concluded polls.

Newly-elected Y.S. Jaganmohan Reddy at the swearing-n ceremony in Vijaywada on May 30, 2019. Credit: PTI

Reddy took the oath in Telugu at 12:23 pm amid thunderous cheers by scores of party leaders and workers in a brief ceremony at the IGMC Stadium in Vijayawada.

Only Reddy took the oath on Thursday. His council of ministers is expected to be sworn in on June 7.

Telangana chief minister K. Chandrasekhar Rao, DMK chief M.K. Stalin and Puducherry health minister Malladi Krishna Rao were also present at the ceremony, as were Telangana deputy chief minister Mahmood Ali, assembly speaker Pocharam Srinivasa Reddy and minister Talasani Srinivasa Yadav.

Reddy’s mother and YSRC honorary president Y.S. Vijayamma, his wife Bharati and sister Sharmila and other members of the family were specially seated on the dais.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi congratulated Reddy, and assured the newly-appointed chief minister full cooperation from the Centre for the development of the state.

Congress president Rahul Gandhi also congratulated Reddy on being sworn in as chief minister of the state.

Jaganmohan Reddy Elected as YSR Congress Legislature Party Leader, Likely to Meet Modi on Sunday

In a spectacular performance, Reddy’s YSR Congress had won 151 of 175 Assembly seats in Andhra Pradesh, the elections for which were held on April 11.

Vijayawada (AP): Y.S. Jaganmohan Reddy was, on Saturday, unanimously elected as the leader of the YSR Congress legislature party, sources said.

The meeting of the newly elected MLAs at the YSR Congress office lasted for 45 minutes before the decision was made, party sources said.

Thanking the MLAs for electing him as the legislature party leader, Reddy said, “in 2019, people voted for us out of faith and belief, in 2024 they should give us a bigger mandate because of our performance.”

Reddy’s election would be conveyed to governor E.S.L. Narasimhan later on Saturday for the party to stake claim to government in the state, sources added.

The party had earlier announced that the swearing-in ceremony would be held on May 30 at Indira Gandhi Municipal Stadium located in the city.

Reddy is scheduled to meet Prime Minister Narendra Modi in the national capital on Sunday.

Reddy, whose party stormed to power with a landslide victory in Andhra Pradesh on Thursday, is likely to discuss providing outside or issue-based support to the Modi government in the meeting, sources said on Saturday.

The meeting assumes importance as the YSRCP chief during the election campaign had said his party would support whoever promises Andhra Pradesh the Special Category Status.

According to an official source, the YSRCP chief will arrive in the national capital tomorrow morning and will meet the prime minister at noon.

After meeting Modi, he is expected to interact with Andhra Bhawan officials, the source added.

Reddy will take oath as new Chief Minister of the state on May 30 in Vijayawada.

In a spectacular performance, Reddy’s YSR Congress won 151 of the 175 Assembly seats in Andhra Pradesh, the elections for which were held on April 11. The party also secured 22 of the 25 Lok Sabha seats in the state.

Andhra Pradesh: Jagan Set to Take Oath on May 30 as TDP Washed out

After Chandrababu Naidu campaigned heavily for an anti-BJP coalition, the TDP is facing the ignominy of a double-drubbing.

New Delhi: In a double-drubbing for the TDP’s Chandrababu Naidu, the incumbent party in Andhra Pradesh looks set to lose heavily in the state elections and win very few seats in the parliament elections.

Its chief rival, the YSR Congress Party, led by Y.S. Jaganmohan Reddy, swept the state at both the national and state level. Jaganmohan Reddy is set to be the chief minister of Andhra Pradesh.

YSRCP sources have already declared that Jaganmohan Reddy will take oath as chief minister on May 30. Chandrababu Naidu has submitted his resignation.

Also Read: BJP’s Rise in Telangana Comes as a Shock to TRS

The YSRCP is leading in the state elections in as many as 149 seats, way above the half-way mark of 88. Their capture of the state’s assembly – which has a total of 175 seats – seems complete. The TDP is leading in just 25 seats.

And in the Lok Sabha election, the YSRCP is leading in 22 out of 25 Lok Sabha seats, with the TDP diminished to just leads in just 3 seats. The YSRCP’s win is in line with what analysts and pollsters were predicting for the state.

Let us look at some of the key takeaways from the results.

Humiliation for Naidu

The TDP’s rout is especially humiliating for the party because Naidu was at the forefront of building an anti-BJP alliance for this election. He criss-crossed the country, seeking appointments with leaders of various state parties.

In the last few weeks Naidu has met Sonia Gandhi, Rahul Gandhi, Sharad Pawar, Sitaram Yechury, Sharad Yadav, Akhilesh Yadav, Maywati, Mamata Banerjee and Arvind Kejriwal.

But his party is facing a clear defeat. In the state elections, Naidu’s son Nara Lokesh is looking at defeat too. He has polled 54,197 votes, while the YSRCP candidate in the lead has polled 63,633 votes.

The TDP was until recently part of the BJP-led NDA, but decided to withdraw after accusing the coalition of not delivering the promise to grant the state special category status after its bifurcation in 2014.

Andhra Pradesh CM N. Chandrababu Naidu. Credit: PTI

Congress still out for a duck

The Congress’s decimation in the state is being driven home in every election. It has not won any seats in the state since the bifurcation that was passed under the UPA government in 2014. The electorate has made their anger felt.

This is the first full fledged election in the state after the bifurcation of Andhra Pradesh. The Congress introduced and passed the Andhra Pradesh Reorganisation Act, 2014 just before the BJP won the 2014 elections. Congress leader and former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh had promised in parliament that the residuary Andhra Pradesh state would get a ‘special category status’. The BJP also promised to do so, but did not fulfill it in their five year term. Naidu has been campaigning on this anti-BJP agenda, promising to push for this special category status.

Even the Congress Pradesh President, Raghuveera Reddy, is performing badly in the Kalyanadurgam seat. He is in third place, trailing YSRCP and TDP.

Jana Sena Party fails to make a dent

New entrant Jana Sena Party, led by actor-turned-politician Pawan Kalyan, is not winning big, but is placed third in some of its contested seats, with the YSRCP and TDP taking the first and second spots in both state and national elections.

Pawan Kalyan himself is trailing in the two assembly seats he is contesting – Bhimavaram and Gajuwaka. Currently he is in second place in Bhimavaram, losing to YSRCP by about 5,000 votes. In Gajuwaka, he is at third place, with YSRCP and TDP in the first and second place.

Also Read: Vijayi Modi? Yes. Vijayi Bharat? Not on Your Life.

In the parliamentary seats of Vizag, former CBI joint director Lakshminarayana has remained at third place throughout the day. He is contesting on a Jana Sena ticket and had conducted investigations against Jagan, who is likely to be the next chief minister of the state. The YSRCP candidate remains strongest in this seat and the TDP candidate is a close second.

Pawan Kalyan’s brother Nagababu is contesting from Narasapuram and has also remained in third place through the day. The first and second place candidates here were again from the YSRCP and TDP respectively.

Naidu and Jagan perform well in their constituencies

The chiefs of the TDP and YSRCP are doing well for themselves. Neither has contested a Lok Sabha seat, and their own assembly seats are safe.

While his party sinks, Naidu’s assembly seat of Kuppam is itself safe. He is the front runner by a large margin, and has polled 98,833 seats and leads by 29,993 votes.

Incoming chief minister Jaganmohan Reddy is also leading in his seat of Pulivendula by an unbeatable margin of 89,708 votes. He has polled a total of 1,31,776 votes.

In Andhra Pradesh, YSR Congress Faces a Peculiar Problem: Dummy Candidates

Evangelist-politician K.A. Paul’s party has fielded at least 19 candidates whose names resemble the YSR Congress’s candidates, an act meant to ‘confuse’ voters.

New Delhi: Imagine you are a voter in the Razole assembly constituency of Andhra Pradesh. You want to vote for the candidate Rajeswara Rao. You enter the poll booth, and there are two Rajeswara Raos. Both their last names are Bonthu. You check their party symbols. One has the ceiling fan, while the other has the rotor blades of a helicopter. Which Rajeswara Rao did you want to vote for?

In many constituencies of Andhra Pradesh, voters may actually face this dilemma. The Praja Shanthi Party (PSP), a little-known party established by evangelist-politician K.A. Paul, has fielded at least 19 candidates whose names are very similar to those of the YSR Congress party.

Paul, once dubbed the “world’s most popular evangelist”, is an eccentric pastor who has claimed – among other things – that he negotiated with Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi to accept the US’s demands during the civil war. He claims to have worked as a spiritual advisor to other dictators such as Saddam Hussein, Slobodan Milosevic and Charles Taylor.

K.A. Paul with Muammar Gaddafi. Credit: Global Peace Initiative

Though his party was established in 2008, it has largely been inactive. In fact, Paul has taken a more proactive approach to American politics, endorsing Barack Obama in 2008 and Donald Trump in 2016. Based as he was in Houston, Paul endorsed both the men because of their opposition to the Iraq war.

In India, he last made national headlines in 2012, when he was arrested for conspiring to murder a man accused in his brother’s murder. At the time, he had accused Y.S. Jaganmohan Reddy of conspiring to send him to jail. He has since obtained a stay order in the case.

Also read: Why Nishad Party Broke Off Its Alliance With Samajwadi Party in UP

Now, with the state elections in Andhra Pradesh predicted to have a close finish, Paul has decided to jump into the fray. However, his party’s gimmicks have resulted in it being dubbed as the ruling-Telugu Desam Party’s (TDP) “dummy”. Critics claim that his only goal is to “confuse” voters and chip away at the YSR Congress party’s votes. Apart from fielding candidates whose names are similar to those contesting on the main opposition party’s ticket, Paul’s party logo and colours also mirror the YSR Congress party.

Perhaps as a token gesture to his party’s election symbol, Paul’s manifesto says that the party will provide air ambulance services via helicopter.

A comparison of PSP and YSR Congress’s symbol and colours. Credit: The Wire

Paul, however, is having none of the criticism. He claims because the YSR Congress party was established four years after the PSP, it is in fact Y.S. Jagan who has “copied” his party’s colours and symbol. He has also contested claims that he is working on behalf of the state’s chief minister N. Chandrababu Naidu, stating, “I have criticised Naidu more than I have criticised Jagan.”

Meanwhile, an enraged YSR Congress Party has shot off a complaint to the Election Commission, asking it to take action against Paul’s party and also cancelling the ‘helicopter’ symbol allotted to it. The poll panel hasn’t responded yet.

But is the PSP really nothing but a “dummy party” meant to confuse voters? Let’s take a closer look.

A telling sign that the PSP could have a secret pact with the TDP is that just seven of the 19 dummy candidates are from the Rayalseema region, where Jagan holds sway. In the 2014 elections, the YSR Congress party sealed a majority of the seats here and it is only expected to grow stronger.

The only outlier was the Anantapur district, where the TDP was victorious in 10 of the 12 seats. Paul’s PSP has fielded four “dummy candidates” in this district, three in constituencies where the victory margins between the TDP and the YSR Congress in 2014 were less than 2,000 votes. The TDP is expected to have a tough job on its hands in Anantapur, where it is facing a backlash after failing to deliver the special status promised to the state during bifurcation.

The PSP has fielded four other “dummy candidates” in the Prakasam district, where the YSR Congress performed marginally better than the TDP in 2014. Though the margins were not so close here, the ruling party is battling anti-incumbency.

Y.S. Jaganmohan Reddy. Credit: Facebook

The TDP will also have to combat a splintering of its vote because of two developments: its decision to leave the NDA and actor-politician Pawan Kalyan’s decision to contest the election in an alliance with the BSP and Left parties. Pawan Kalyan’s support and the ‘Modi wave’ were said to have played a crucial role in consolidating a victory for Naidu.

The troika of anti-incumbency, Pawan Kalyan and the BJP’s solo fight will surely make the margins between the TDP and the YSR Congress very slender. In 2014, even without having to battle any of these factors, the TDP earned just 1.7% more votes than the YSR Congress Party (though it contested 15 seats fewer).

In such a scenario, it not unthinkable that “dummy candidates” who can subvert even 1,000 votes may play a crucial role in swinging fortunes.

In the 2018 Telangana assembly elections, the Telangana Rashtra Samithi blamed the defeat of some of its candidates on confusion between the party’s “car” symbol and the “truck” symbol used by the Samajwadi Forward Bloc, a little-known party. The party has successfully lobbied to get the truck and iron box symbols removed from the list of free symbols for the Lok Sabha polls.

Also read: Telugu Newspaper Called out for ‘Fake Survey’

This is a tactic that is not always successful, as former Chhattisgarh chief minister Ajit Jogi found out during the 2014 Lok Sabha elections. Jogi was accused of foisting 10 “dummy candidates” with the same name as his BJP rival – Chandu Lal Sahu. Though the dummy candidates did eat into the real Chandu Lal’s votes, it was not enough for Jogi to win.

Paul, who is also contesting the Narsapur assembly and Lok Sabha constituencies, is unlikely to secure any seats for his party. But he could decide the fates of Jagan and Naidu.

Andhra Pradesh: BJP Announces Candidates for Polls; Retains Only One of Three Sitting MLAs

With the Telugu Desam Party breaking ties with the BJP over the issue of a special category status to Andhra Pradesh, the saffron party is now contesting the elections alone.

Amaravati: The Bharatiya Janata Party Sunday announced its first list of 123 candidates for the elections to the 175-member Andhra Pradesh assembly scheduled for April 11.

Only one of the three sitting MLAs of the BJP, which is fighting the elections on its own, has been re-nominated as the other two have opted out of the contest.

BJPs fourth MLA, elected in 2014, had quit the party to join the Jana Sena and has been fielded by it for the Rajamahendravaram Lok Sabha constituency.

The BJP is hoping to improve on its tally of four in 2014, while the main contest will be between the ruling Telugu Desam Party and the main opposition YSR Congress, headed by Y.S. Jaganmohan Reddy.

Also Read: Explainer: TDP’s Anger Against the Narendra Modi Govt and What It Means for BJP

A sitting MLA who defected from the YSR Congress to Telugu Desam and later to the BJP has been given the ticket in the first list of the saffron party.

P. Vishnu Kumar Raju, who was elected to the assembly for the first time in 2014 from Visakhapatnam North, has been re-nominated.

Sitting MLA P. Manikyala Rao from Tadepalligudem showed no interest in contesting again, while another, Kamineni Srinivas, from Kaikaluru has announced his decision to quit electoral politics.

Incidentally, both of them have served as ministers in the Chandrababu Naidu Cabinet when the TDP and the BJP were in an alliance from 2014 to 2018.

T. Jayaramulu has been chosen for the Badwel (SC) seat in Kadapa district. He was elected in 2014 on a YSRC ticket but he moved to the TDP in 2016. Just a couple of days ago, he quit the TDP and joined the BJP.

Former MLA Nimmaka Jayaraju has been chosen for the Kurupam (ST) seat while senior politician Kandula Rajamohan Reddy has been nominated for Kadapa.

Also Read: TDP Releases First List of Candidates for Andhra Pradesh Assembly Election

Industrialist N. S. Tulasinath has been chosen to take on Chief Minister N. Chandrababu Naidu in Kuppam in Chittoor district.

Former Mayor of Visakhapatnam city, Pulusu Janardhan, has been given the Gajuwaka Assembly ticket.

State BJP general secretary V. Satyamurthy will be the candidate from Vijayawada Central while BJYM national secretary Panthala Suresh is being fielded from the Koduru (SC) constituency.

The BJP fought the 2014 election in an alliance with the TDP and with the outside support of Jana Sena of film star Pawan Kalyan.

It had contested 15 assembly and five Lok Sabha seats as part of the alliance and has won four and two seats respectively.

With the TDP breaking ties over the issue of a special category status to Andhra Pradesh, the BJP is now fighting the elections on its own.