'Anna' movement in Tamil Nadu BJP: Mass resignations leave party staring at an exodus

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NEW DELHI: K Annamalai's exit from the Bharatiya Janata Party did not remain a standalone development for long. Within hours of his departure, Tamil Nadu BJP vice-president Karu Nagarajan and 15 other party functionaries resigned, raising questions about the party's ability to contain the fallout.

The resignations came despite state BJP president Nainar Nagendran's assertion that Annamalai's departure would have "no impact" on the organisation.
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The resignations have fuelled speculation that the BJP could face a wider exodus in Tamil Nadu, particularly among cadres and local leaders who viewed Annamalai as the party's most prominent state-level face. Signs of such loyalty were visible months earlier when posters bearing slogans such as "Our Leader, Come and Lead Us" appeared across Chennai ahead of his birthday celebrations.


Annamalai's new venture has also shown signs of early momentum. His political movement , We The Leader , claimed to have attracted more than eight lakh volunteers within hours of its launch, underscoring the support base he appears to command beyond the BJP's formal structure.

While Annamalai has stopped short of announcing a political party, he has outlined the principles he wants the movement to champion. "There is no permanent MLA, MP or minister. This includes myself. This is going to be our goal and motto of our political movement," he said, positioning the initiative as an alternative to personality-driven and dynastic politics.

Yet key questions remain unanswered. Beyond broad promises of political reform, Annamalai has not laid out a clear ideological framework for the movement or indicated when, or if, it will evolve into a full-fledged political party.

Impact on BJP
  • Annamalai's departure leaves the BJP confronting a difficult question -- whether it abandoned a long-term political experiment before it had the chance to fully mature.

  • Although he did not lead the party into either of the assembly elections that coincided with his rise, he became the BJP's most recognisable face in Tamil Nadu and helped inject energy into a cadre that had long struggled for visibility in a state dominated by Dravidian parties.

    The former IPS officer took over as state BJP chief after the 2021 assembly election, in which the party won four seats and secured a vote share of 2.62%. By the time the 2026 election concluded, Annamalai was no longer at the helm. The BJP's tally had fallen to a single seat, while its vote share saw only a marginal increase to 2.99%.

    While the electoral gains remained limited, Annamalai's significance extended beyond numbers. He emerged as the party's primary campaigner, drew media attention and cultivated a support base that often appeared more invested in his leadership than in the BJP's organisational structure. The resignations that followed his exit have only reinforced concerns that a section of local leaders and grassroots workers may choose to follow him into his new political venture.

    The challenge for the BJP is compounded by the changing political landscape in Tamil Nadu. The 2026 assembly election demonstrated that voters were willing to embrace a fresh political alternative, with Vijay's TVK emerging as the biggest beneficiary of that sentiment. For years, the BJP had projected Annamalai as its vehicle to break into that space. With his departure and TVK's rise, the party now risks losing both a prominent state leader and its claim to being the state's most credible non-Dravidian alternative.

    Whether the feared exodus materialises remains to be seen. But for a party that has struggled for decades to establish a meaningful foothold in Tamil Nadu, the loss of its most visible local face could prove far more consequential than BJP leaders currently acknowledge.