Kishor attended the TVK's one-year celebration on Wednesday. He is an advisor to Vijay, who is aiming to displace the two Dravidian Parties in the next Assembly polls.
On Wednesday, Union Home Minister Amit Shah launched a scathing attack on the ruling DMK government in Tamil Nadu, accusing its leaders of corruption and misgovernance.
Meanwhile, Tamil Nadu unit BJP President K Annamalai on Tuesday slammed Chief Minister MK Stalin, accusing him of speaking "lies" one after another. Annamalai assured that the NDA government will do justice to all states.He assured that no southern state would lose anything, referring to
Union Home Minister Amit Shah on Wednesday launched a scathing attack on the ruling DMK government in Tamil Nadu, accusing its leaders of corruption and misgovernance.
He further stated that the New Education Policy (NEP) was the best policies seen by the people and was aiming to promote both mother tongue and national link language --English.
BJP leader Tamilisai Soundarajan hit out at Chief Minister MK Stalin after Hindi words were erased from signboards with black tar at Trichy Railway station by Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK) workers and said that the ruling party cannot encash on language politics anymore.
The protest was led by Trichy MLA M Anbazhagan and the DMK's District Secretary Vairamani, who voiced their concerns regarding the alleged increasing push for Hindi in the state.
"It is an assault on the linguistic and cultural identity of Tamil Nadu. The BJP should contest the 2026 elections in Tamil Nadu without an alliance because no other political party supports NEP here," Chidambaram, Lok Sabha MP, told ANI.
"Some political parties still want to divide our country based on language. Mother tongue is important for everyone. Mahakavi Bharati called Tamil the greatest language after knowing more than 10 languages. So people should study more languages," he told ANI
DMK Spokesperson TKS Elangovan criticises the three-language policy, calling it an imposition of religious ideas on education. He also stressed the state's right to legislate on education and rejected the mandatory use of Hindi.