CHENNAI — Days after securing 108 assembly seats on a strict anti-establishment platform, a newly formed political party led by a prominent actor-turned-politician has begun intense backroom negotiations with the exact legacy power brokers it spent the last year condemning.
Falling just 10 seats shy of the 118 required for a majority, party officials confirmed that their mandate to completely dismantle the state's entrenched political duopoly relies entirely on securing the support of several smaller dynastic factions. "We promised the voters a clean break from decades of transactional coalition politics," a party spokesperson said while waiting outside the residence of a regional alliance leader. "And we are fully committed to implementing that vision, just as soon as we finalize which state ministries to hand over in exchange for their legislative backing."
The resulting scramble has also drawn commentary from the corporate sector. A prominent tech billionaire, who initially predicted the traditional duopoly would easily win the election, has now issued a public demand for "fresh elections" to correct the outcome. "The people clearly want a super majority, which is why they did not vote for one," the CEO stated, explaining that holding a second election is the only way to validate the revised electoral models he built using "common man" insights.
At press time, representatives for the anti-corruption wave were reportedly assuring potential coalition partners that the party's central campaign promise to jail corrupt officials would be implemented with a strict exemption for anyone who helps them cross the 118-seat threshold.