KTR’s Protest Over MLA Defections Finds Little Support

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Bharat Rashtra Samithi (BRS) working president K T Rama Rao has been vocally protesting the Telangana Assembly Speaker’s decision on Wednesday to refuse the disqualification of five MLAs who allegedly defected to the Congress. However, his criticism has failed to gain significant traction in political and media circles.

Assembly Speaker Gaddam Prasad Kumar ruled that the five legislators had not formally defected from the BRS to the Congress, stating that there was no strong evidence to support the allegations. Similar rulings are expected in cases involving other MLAs as well. That said, a few leaders—such as Kadiyam Srihari and Danam Nagender—may still be compelled to resign, as they openly aligned with the Congress during the recent Lok Sabha elections.

Reacting sharply, KTR described the Speaker’s decision as “unjust, illegal, and undemocratic.” He accused the Congress of showing disrespect towards the Constitution and the rule of law, and alleged that the ruling was driven by fear of public backlash in potential by-elections.

However, political analysts have pointed out what they see as a contradiction in the BRS’s stance, recalling the party’s own record during the tenure of K Chandrashekar Rao. During that period, large-scale defections—and even party mergers—were not only permitted but actively encouraged. Such moves were often defended using legal and technical interpretations, with KCR frequently terming them “political realignments.”

KTR has attempted to defend his party’s past actions by drawing a distinction between “defections” and “mergers,” arguing that mergers are constitutional. Critics, however, say this argument relies heavily on legal technicalities while ignoring public perception and ethical considerations.

Analysts note that if defections under the previous BRS regime were justified on technical grounds, it weakens the party’s moral authority to condemn similar actions by the current Congress government. “Earlier defections were defended legally, not morally. Now, the Speaker is doing the same,” one analyst observed.

Political observers caution that such justifications—whether for piecemeal defections or wholesale mergers—overlook the core issue: elected representatives switching loyalties ultimately undermines voter trust and amounts to a betrayal of the electoral mandate.


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