Jagan vs Sharmila: TDP eyes gains as Pulivendula turns battleground for sibling rivalry

All eyes are on the sibling rivalry between CM Jagan Mohan Reddy and his sister Sharmila as Andhra gears up for the high stakes battle at Pulivendula during upcoming elections.

Published May 11, 2024 | 6:57 PMUpdated May 11, 2024 | 6:57 PM

Pulivendula is gearing up for the battle between Reddy siblings (South First)

The nondescript town of Pulivendula in Andhra Pradesh’s arid Rayalaseema region has long been the unquestioned bastion of the state’s powerful Reddy clan.

As voters gear up for the crucial Assembly and Lok Sabha elections on May 13, all eyes are on the high-stakes battle in Pulivendula — an Assembly constituency that has been a Reddy family stronghold for over four decades.

How Pulivendula turned into a battleground

Late Chief Minister YS Rajasekhara Reddy won the seat for the first time in 1978 on a Congress ticket. Since then, someone or the other from his family has consecutively emerged victorious in 13 elections including three by-polls.

YS Jagan Mohan Reddy, the incumbent Chief Minister and head of the ruling YSRCP, is vying for a hat-trick win here. But his path to victory has been obstructed by none other than his estranged sister, YS Sharmila Reddy.

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Sharmila, who recently merged her YSR Telangana Party with the Congress, has thrown the gauntlet against her brother.

Contesting from the Kadapa parliamentary seat, which encompasses Pulivendula among its seven Assembly segments, she has vowed to unseat Jagan from their hometown turf and dislodge his party from power in Andhra Pradesh.

The Reddy siblings’ rivalry

The face-off has infused the electoral contest with an intensely personal dimension, setting the stage for a fierce battle as Sharmila challenges her brother’s formidable political legacy built on the pro-poor, farmer-friendly image of their late father, Rajasekhara Reddy, popularly known as YSR.

“We are telling people that the current YSR Congress is a fake Congress party. The real successor of Rajasekhara Reddy’s Congress is his daughter Sharmila,” said Dhruva Reddy, Sharmila’s young protege fielded against the Chief Minister in Pulivendula.

Jagan faces a challenge from Mareddy Ravindranath Reddy of the rival Telugu Desam Party (TDP), who defeated Jagan’s uncle YS Vivekananda Reddy in the 2017 legislative council polls.

The sibling rift that has plagued the Reddy family in the aftermath of Rajasekhara Reddy’s tragic death in 2009 has now spilled onto Pulivendula’s streets.

“Sibling rivalry will benefit the TDP. We hope to get good results if elections are held democratically,” said the CM’s opponent, eyeing prospects of the Reddy family’s divided voter base.

In 2019, voters elected Jagan riding on the name of his father, Ravindranath Reddy said, adding that the chief minister has failed to live up to expectations by not developing either the constituency or the state after coming to power.

Sharmila claimed that had the Congress been in power post-2014 bifurcation, Andhra Pradesh would have got all the promises like special status and a new capital. A decade later, “people see what they lost by not voting Congress.”

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Battle for justice

She also lashed out at her brother for re-nominating her cousin Avinash Reddy as the YSRCP candidate from Kadapa despite a CBI probe naming him an accused in the murder case of their uncle YS Vivekananda Reddy.

“My uncle was murdered five years ago, and the CBI has named the incumbent MP as an accused. Yet, Jagan has fielded him again. This is something the family cannot digest. So, this battle is about justice,” Sharmila said.

Exuding confidence in winning from Kadapa, Sharmila said her goal is to project the Congress as the only alternative to what she termed the “Andhra BJP” – comprising N Chandrababu Naidu’s TDP, Jagan’s YSRCP, and Pawan Kalyan’s Jana Sena.

As verbal volleys are traded, loyalties tested, and caste equations realigned in the divided family’s fiefdom, Pulivendula finds itself torn between blood ties and long-held political affiliations in this high-decibel contest.

There are 2.24 lakh voters in the Pulivendula Assembly segment. Jagan had won by 75,243 votes and 90,110 votes in the 2014 and 2019 elections respectively.

(Disclaimer: The headline, subheads, and intro of this report along with the photos may have been reworked by South First. The rest of the content is from a syndicated feed, and has been edited for style.)

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