City
Epaper

TN Assembly adjourned sine die after turbulent first session of year

By IANS | Updated: January 24, 2026 15:45 IST

Chennai, Jan 24 The Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly has been adjourned sine die on Saturday, with Speaker M. ...

Open in App

Chennai, Jan 24 The Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly has been adjourned sine die on Saturday, with Speaker M. Appavu announcing the dissolution of the session without fixing a date for its next sitting.

The decision brought to a close the year's first Assembly session, which was marked by political tension and controversy surrounding the Governor's address.

The session commenced on January 20 with the customary address by the Governor. However, the proceedings took an unexpected turn at the very outset when the Governor declined to read his prepared speech and walked out of the House, citing the absence of the national anthem at the beginning of the programme.

In Tamil Nadu, it has long been the established practice to begin Assembly proceedings with the Tamil Thai Vazhthu and conclude with the national anthem -- a convention followed for decades.

After the Assembly met for three consecutive days on Saturday, Chief Minister M. K. Stalin replied to the motion of thanks for the Governor's address. The principal opposition party, the All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (AIADMK), chose to boycott the House during the Chief Minister's response, alleging bias and procedural impropriety.

In his address, Stalin stated he was compelled to provide clarifications in the Assembly, since it was constitutionally mandated to respond to the Governor's address. He accused the Governor of disregarding democratic conventions, stressing that the elected government had both the responsibility and the authority to place its position on record before the legislature and the people.

The Chief Minister went on to outline the key achievements and welfare initiatives of the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK) government. He listed a range of social sector programmes and made fresh announcements aimed at part-time teachers, anganwadi workers, and employees involved in nutrition schemes, reiterating his government's commitment to social justice and inclusive development.

Concluding his speech, Stalin expressed confidence that the DMK would return to power in the next Assembly elections, asserting that the government's performance and welfare-oriented governance would earn renewed public support.

With the completion of the Chief Minister's reply and no further legislative business scheduled, Speaker Appavu formally declared the Assembly adjourned sine die, effectively ending the first session of the year without specifying when the House would reconvene.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

Politics"DMK government has not been able to bring effective schemes": AIADMK candidate

InternationalWill take action against infrastructure of US, its allies, says Iran as Trump deadline looms

Politics"Will never bow our head to three-language formula": DMK MP

Politics"Welfare schemes would be stopped, if NDA comes to power": CM MK Stalin

International"No military objective justifies deliberate infliction of suffering on civilian population": UN Chief on Trump's threat

National Realted Stories

National"Despite global turmoil, India continues to move forward on its journey of progress": CM Yogi Adityanath

NationalConspirators won’t harm India if Sanatanis unite: CM Yogi

NationalCM Majhi calls budget key to Odisha's long-term development

National"If action is being taken against infiltrators, why does Mamata Banerjee feel pain"?: BJP MP Kangana Ranaut

NationalBye-election between the poor and the rich, Cong will lose: Karnataka BJP