R ARIVANANTHAM
CHENNAI, JAN 17
With an eye firmly on the Tamil Nadu Assembly elections 2026, the All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (AIADMK) on Saturday rolled out the first phase of its poll promises, reviving its signature “Amma” welfare plank and sharpening its political positioning against the ruling DMK as well as emerging cine-political forces.
The announcements, made on the occasion of former Chief Minister MGR’s 109th birth anniversary, are widely seen as the party’s opening salvo to reclaim its traditional voter base while rebuilding a broader opposition coalition.
- AIADMK kicks off 2026 campaign with ‘Amma Brand’ welfare push
- ₹2,000 cash transfer, free bus rides and ‘Amma’ schemes return
- Housing, rural jobs and social justice outreach
- Freebies with a political message: matching DMK, raising the stakes
- NDA math: BJP, PMK, OPS, Dinakaran, Sasikala factors
- Law & order, youth, economy — and countering Vijay
As per a statement by AIADMK general secretary Edappadi K Palaniswami, the party promised ₹2,000 financial assistance to all ration card–holding families, credited directly to the bank account of the woman head of the household, under the Kulavilakku Scheme.
“The first phase of our election promises focuses on women, families and livelihoods,” Palaniswami said, outlining a welfare roadmap that also includes:
சட்டமன்றப் பொதுத் தேர்தல் – 2026
அனைத்திந்திய அண்ணா திராவிட முன்னேற்றக் கழக முதல்கட்ட தேர்தல் வாக்குறுதிகள்!#AIADMKManifesto #EPSfor2026 @EPSTamilNadu pic.twitter.com/IMoUasvOib
— AIADMK – SayYesToWomenSafety&AIADMK (@AIADMKOfficial) January 17, 2026
- Free bus travel for men on city buses, while continuing the existing free bus travel scheme for women without interruption
- Amma Two-Wheeler Scheme, offering subsidised two-wheelers to five lakh women, with a government subsidy of ₹25,000 per beneficiary
Under the proposed Amma Illam Scheme, the AIADMK promised to provide concrete houses to landless families—independent houses in rural areas and free apartments in urban centres for those without homes.
According to local media reports, the party also promised that when sons of Scheduled Castes living in the same household get married and move out, the government would purchase land and construct concrete houses for them.
On rural employment, Palaniswami said that while the Union government has increased work under the employment guarantee scheme to 125 days, an AIADMK government would extend it to 150 days, positioning the party as more generous than both the Centre and the DMK government.
Political observers note that several of the AIADMK’s proposals closely mirror—and in some cases expand—the DMK government’s existing welfare initiatives, including housing schemes currently implemented under the Kalaignar Housing Scheme.
The strategy appears twofold: neutralise DMK’s welfare advantage while reclaiming the AIADMK’s legacy as the original architect of Tamil Nadu’s freebie-driven social security model under MGR and Jayalalithaa.
Beyond welfare politics, the AIADMK is also recalibrating its alliance strategy, with strong signals of reviving and consolidating an NDA framework in Tamil Nadu.
Palaniswami earlier asserted that the NDA would “win big in the 2026 elections”, indicating renewed engagement with the BJP. Simultaneously, backchannel efforts are underway to stitch together a broader anti-DMK front by accommodating the PMK, reaching out to OPS, and tactically managing the political relevance of TTV Dhinakaran and VK Sasikala, whose vote bases—though diminished—remain crucial in tight contests.
Sharpening his attack on the ruling party, Palaniswami accused the DMK regime of governance failure, alleging that “sexual assaults are happening under the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam regime”, and positioning AIADMK as the alternative for safety and stability.
Going forward, party insiders say the AIADMK plans to complement its freebie promises with youth-centric employment initiatives, entrepreneurship support and economic revival messaging, aimed at offsetting the growing appeal of actor-politician Vijay, whose entry threatens to split the anti-DMK vote.
As Tamil Nadu heads toward a high-stakes 2026 showdown, the AIADMK’s strategy is clear: reclaim the Amma welfare mantle, rebuild alliances, sharpen law-and-order rhetoric, and repackage itself as both a protector of social security and a catalyst for economic revival.








