
Ever since the Congress formed the government in Telangana, the Bharat Rashtra Samithi (BRS) led by former chief minister K. Chandrasekhar Rao seems unable to digest A. Revanth Reddy’s rise as the state’s Chief Minister. From the very beginning, the BRS has been making consistent attempts to portray Revanth as an inefficient and incapable leader, unfit to hold the top post.
Party insiders reveal that under the direction of BRS working president K. T. Rama Rao (KTR), the party has been actively pushing narratives against Revanth through friendly digital platforms, social media handles, and select mainstream outlets that previously maintained close ties with the BRS regime.
Recently, a report published in an English news website alleged that the Congress high command, including AICC president Mallikarjun Kharge, is “extremely unhappy” with Revanth Reddy’s performance and believes he has “ruined the party” in the last two years. The report went on to claim that Kharge was dissatisfied with the Telangana government’s functioning and cited reasons such as the delay in implementing the “Six Guarantees,” internal lack of coordination, and public disagreements among ministers.
However, the tone and framing of the article clearly suggest it might have been a deliberate plant — a move orchestrated by the BRS to dent Revanth Reddy’s image and create confusion within the Congress ranks. Political observers note that such targeted reports have become a routine part of BRS’s strategy to counter the Congress government and keep the narrative against Revanth alive in both social and political circles.
While the Congress leadership has not issued any statement on the matter, it is evident that the opposition’s campaign aims to portray the Telangana CM as struggling with internal dissent and administrative lapses — a tactic designed to weaken his public standing ahead of future political battles.
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