A faction of 30 plus AIADMK MLAs led by Mailam Assembly constituency MLA C.Ve.Shanmugam and Thondamuthur Assembly Constituency MLA S.P. Velumani coming out of Pro-tem Assembly speaker MV. Karuppaiah’s office after submitting letter as the new leader of the AIADMK Legislative Party, on May 11, 2026.
| Photo Credit: B. Jothi Ramalingam
All is not well in the All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam after the recent election drubbing in Tamil Nadu, with the newly elected legislators sharply divided on electing their Legislature Party leader. While one group supports party general secretary Edappadi K. Palaniswami, a larger group is throwing its weight behind former Minister S.P. Velumani.
On Monday, after the swearing-in of all the legislators was over, a letter, purportedly signed by a group of legislators of the AIADMK stating that Mr. Palaniswami had been elected the Leader of the Legislature Party, was submitted to the Pro-tem Speaker M.V. Karuppaiah at his chamber. As per media reports, the general secretary got the backing of 17 of the 47 MLAs belonging to the AIADMK, though a member of the Palaniswami camp claimed it was 24. Former Handlooms Minister O.S. Manian, who handed over the letter to the Pro-tem Speaker, told The Hindu that he was not aware of the contents of the letter. “I did what I was asked to do,” he observed.
However, around 6 p.m., former Law Minister C.Ve. Shanmugam, accompanied by Mr. Velumani and many other former Ministers, including Natham R. Viswanathan and R. Kamaraj, came to the office of the Pro-tem Speaker and presented a letter claiming the support of 30 MLAs for the leadership of Mr. Velumani.
Earlier in the day, Mr. Palaniswami denied reports that the party was heading towards a split.
The churning in the AIADMK was also evident in the Assembly, going by the reception provided by the party legislators to Mr. Palaniswami and Mr. Velumani. Unlike on previous occasions in the last five years when Mr. Palaniswami was accompanied by a large contingent of his colleagues while entering the Assembly premises, only a handful of MLAs escorted him this time. Mr. Velumani, who served as the Local Administration Minister in the Palaniswami Cabinet and seen invariably with the former in the past, came later to the Assembly premises along with former Health Minister C. Vijayabaskar.
Likewise, when the turn came for the former Chief Minister and Mr. Velumani to be sworn in as MLAs, the reception given to them by their colleagues, in the form of thumping of desks, was similar. The message was clear: the challenge to Mr. Palaniswami’s leadership was quite open.
In the past four days, the residence of Mr. Shanmugam on Karpagam Avenue, near Foreshore Estate, had become the centre of activity in the AIADMK, with a large number of MLAs and other office-bearers attending discussions on their future course of action. Mr. Shanmugam, who did not attend the oath-taking event in the morning, went to the Assembly around 3.15 p.m. and was sworn in as an MLA. The rebel MLAs also had a meeting at a guesthouse near Mr. Shanmugam’s house.
About two years ago, when the party had suffered a drubbing in the Lok Sabha election, a delegation of six leaders, including Mr. Shanmugam, Mr. Velumani and Mr. Viswanathan, had sought to impress upon Mr. Palaniswami that there should be reconciliation with former party leaders such as V.K. Sasikala.
Former Chief Minister and AIADMK general secretary Edappadi K. Palaniswami and the MLA-elects of his party arrive at the Secretariat in Chennai to take oath as MLAs on May 11, 2026
| Photo Credit:
R. Ragu

The rival group of AIADMK MLA-elects led by S.P. Velumani and C. Vijayabaskar arrive at the Secretariat in Chennai to take oath as MLAs on May 11, 2026
| Photo Credit:
R. Ragu
Published – May 11, 2026 07:21 pm IST
