4 min readChennaiMay 27, 2026 06:25 AM IST First published on: May 27, 2026 at 06:24 AM ISTIn Tamil Nadu’s rapidly shifting political climate — where actor-turned-Chief Minister C Joseph Vijay has already unsettled not just the DMK and AIADMK but also the BJP’s own internal equations — former state BJP chief K Annamalai has delivered what appeared, on the surface, to be a simple appeal on school language policy.Inside BJP circles, however, his statement on Monday was read as something more layered. It is being seen as part policy intervention, part political signalling, and part personal frustration by a leader who once dominated the party’s Tamil Nadu narrative before Delhi pushed him into an uneasy alliance with the AIADMK, which ended up in failure as he had predicted.AdvertisementIn a sharply worded statement, Annamalai urged the Union Education Ministry to withdraw a recent CBSE notification that advanced the implementation of compulsory learning of a third language for Class 9 students from the 2029-30 academic year to the current academic year.The unusual aspect was not merely the criticism itself, but who was making it.Annamalai, one of the BJP’s most aggressive defenders of the Centre in Tamil Nadu over the last few years, publicly questioned the timing and practicality of the move. He warned that forcing Class 9 students to suddenly learn a new language “will only pressurise children and affect their overall learning outcomes”.AdvertisementHe recalled that when the CBSE first announced the three-language framework in April 2026, he had welcomed it as an opportunity for children “to broaden their understanding of India’s diverse literary landscape.” But he said the sudden rollback of the earlier timeline had come as “a shock to many parents, especially those from Tamil Nadu”.“Expecting a Class 9 student to learn a new language in a short time will only pressurise children,” he said, asking the ministry to “roll back this notification immediately”.Inside the BJPFor a state where language politics has historically shaped governments, the statement immediately drew attention. But within sections of the BJP, it also triggered another conversation: what exactly was Annamalai signalling?Several leaders and functionaries interpreted the intervention as a message aimed as much at Delhi as at parents in the state.“He is effectively saying: either trust me fully and let me build the party here over the next six or seven years at least without constant interference from Delhi leaders who have a little understanding about Tamil Nadu, or understand that he will not remain politically silent,” said one BJP leader.Another senior BJP leader described the statement as the frustration of a politician who built visibility for the party in Tamil Nadu in a short span of time, only to be sidelined after being asked to facilitate an alliance with the AIADMK before the Assembly elections, an alliance that ultimately collapsed politically after Vijay’s rise disrupted the state’s traditional equations.The BJP today finds itself in an unfamiliar situation in Tamil Nadu. The DMK has lost power and is struggling to hold together its alliance ecosystem. The AIADMK is vertically split and fighting for survival. And the BJP, despite years of aggressive expansion efforts, risks appearing stranded between the two collapsing Dravidian formations while Vijay absorbs much of the anti-establishment energy that once fuelled Annamalai’s own appeal.you may likeInside the BJP, some leaders now openly acknowledge that the old political language no longer works with younger voters raised on social media, fandom politics, and anti-party sentiment. In that altered landscape, Annamalai’s visibility-driven style had once appeared useful to the party.In Tamil Nadu politics, leaders oppose the Centre on language issues unless they are prepared to send a larger political message. And when a BJP leader from Tamil Nadu does it, the message travels even faster.“For now, Annamalai framed it entirely as concern for students and parents. But in a state where every sentence is politically decoded within minutes, the subtext mattered almost as much as the text itself. Even after the electoral defeat and the changing equations with AIADMK, Annamalai’s role became visibly uncertain. Which is partly why his latest statement felt striking,” said a senior RSS leader.