From Where Will Annamalai Contest TN Elections - Coimbatore North or Modakurichi?
As the Bharatiya Janata Party races to finalise its candidate list for the Tamil Nadu assembly elections, one question is consuming party insiders and cadres alike: from which constituency will former state president K Annamalai contest?
With the party leadership insisting he take the field, Annamalai has laid down a clear condition - he will only stand if offered one of six assembly segments within the Coimbatore parliamentary constituency, where he secured 32 per cent of the vote in the 2024 Lok Sabha election. But of those six, only Coimbatore North is currently allotted to the BJP. And that seat is already occupied by Vanathi Srinivasan, who has refused to step aside, according to a report in The Times of India.
AI-generated summary, reviewed by editors

That has forced the leadership to look elsewhere, with Modakurichi and Tiruppur North emerging as possible alternatives. Yet neither option is straightforward, and each carries significant electoral risk.
Coimbatore North: AIADMK's fortress, but cracks are showing
The Coimbatore North constituency has been a reliable stronghold for the AIADMK for over a decade. In the last three assembly elections, the party has won the seat every time, but its dominance is visibly eroding.
In 2011, AIADMK's T. Malaravan swept to victory with a commanding 60.07 per cent of the vote, winning by a staggering margin of 40,098 votes. By 2016, P.R.G. Arun Kumar held the seat with 41.05 per cent and a reduced margin of 7,724 votes. And in 2021, Amman K. Arjunan scraped through with just 40.16 per cent, defeating the DMK by close to 4,000 votes.
For Annamalai, Coimbatore North offers a clear narrative: a high-profile candidate could potentially flip a seat where the incumbent's vote share has collapsed from 60 per cent to 40 per cent in a decade.
The constituency's demographics also favour the BJP's brand of urban, industrial politics. Vellala Gounders, who make up roughly 20 per cent of the electorate, have historically backed the AIADMK, but a charismatic candidate like Annamalai could consolidate that vote. Naidus (15 per cent) and a notable presence of Telugu, Kannada and North Indian linguistic minorities-drawn to the city's textile and industrial sectors-offer additional cross-voting potential.
However, the obstacle remains Vanathi Srinivasan's refusal to vacate, and the party has so far been unwilling to force the issue.
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Modakurichi: A BJP-held seat with a razor-thin margin
If Coimbatore North proves inaccessible, Modakurichi presents an intriguing-if risky-alternative. Unlike Coimbatore North, this constituency is already in BJP hands, won by C. Saraswathi in the 2021 election.
But that victory was anything but decisive. Saraswathi polled 78,125 votes (43.52 per cent) and won by just 281 votes-a margin of 0.16 per cent. It was a dramatic upset in a seat that the AIADMK had previously dominated: in 2011, R.N. Kittusamy won Modakurichi with 57.38 per cent and a colossal margin of 40,162 votes; in 2016, V.P. Sivasubramani held it with 43.62 per cent and a 2,222-vote margin.
Modakurichi lies in the Kongu belt of Erode district, where agrarian interests and community identity run deep. The dominant Kongu Vellalar Gounders hold significant land and political influence, while Scheduled Castes account for roughly 19.1 per cent of the population-a critical voting bloc for the DMK and its allies. For Annamalai, contesting here would mean defending a wafer-thin majority in unfamiliar territory, away from his Coimbatore base.
What happens next?
After Tuesday's core committee meeting, Union minister Piyush Goyal held a half-hour one-on-one with Annamalai. The details remain unknown, but by Wednesday the party had shortlisted three names for each of the six deadlocked constituencies, with a final decision expected as early as Thursday.
What is clear is that Annamalai is deeply unhappy. Having already stepped down from his election management role after being removed as state president, he had told the high command he would not contest at all. Western Tamil Nadu cadres have erupted in protest, surrounding Union Minister L Murugan in Palani.
With polling day set for Thursday, April 23, and counting on Monday, May 4, the BJP has run out of time for deliberation. Whether Annamalai ends up in Coimbatore North, Modakurichi, or somewhere else entirely, one thing is certain: his candidacy will define the BJP's campaign in Tamil Nadu. And the party can ill afford to get it wrong.
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