Vijay’s digital political earthquake transforms Tamil Nadu aftershock election victory

WorldPolitics
11 May 2026 • 8:15 AM MYT
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Vijay’s digital political earthquake transforms Tamil Nadu aftershock election victory

INDIA’S political establishment has been left reeling after actor-turned-politician C. Joseph Vijay led his newly formed Tamilaga Vettri Kazhagam to a stunning election victory in Tamil Nadu, reshaping the state’s political landscape through a campaign driven less by traditional rallies than by an unprecedented online mobilisation effort.

The victory marked a dramatic collapse in the dominance of Tamil Nadu’s long-established regional parties, with Vijay’s party securing 108 seats in the 234-member state assembly, leaving it only 10 seats short of an outright majority.

The BBC reported that following days of political uncertainty, Vijay was sworn in as chief minister on Sunday.

Among the most symbolic victories was the triumph of Madhar Badhurudeen in the Madurai Central constituency, home to the renowned Meenakshi Amman Temple.

Badhurudeen, a 42-year-old meat shop owner and political newcomer, defeated two of Tamil Nadu’s most recognisable political heavyweights despite running a modest and largely understated campaign.

His rivals included senior Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam leader and state minister Palanivel Thiaga Rajan, as well as actor-filmmaker Sundar C representing the All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam.

While rival parties deployed massive rallies, celebrity endorsements and senior political figures, Badhurudeen campaigned quietly with small groups of supporters, often walking through neighbourhoods appealing directly to voters.

Few analysts believed he could prevail in a constituency dominated by Hindu voters in one of southern India’s most culturally significant temple cities.

Yet Badhurudeen secured victory by more than 19,000 votes.

“My only strength was our leader Vijay and the electoral symbol of the party (a whistle). I campaigned based on the principles of our leader, offering a corruption-free administration,” Badhurudeen said.

Political observers say the election represented a watershed moment in Indian campaigning, with social media proving decisive in ways never previously seen at state level.

Anup Chandrasekharan, a Bengaluru-based media strategist, described the campaign as a turning point in Indian electoral politics.

“Probably this was the first election in India that was won almost entirely with the help of social media,” he said.

He added that Vijay’s supporters had “ushered in a digital revolution” through aggressive and highly coordinated use of platforms such as YouTube, Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp.

Unlike most Indian politicians, Vijay avoided lengthy public appearances, media interviews and conventional press conferences during the campaign.

His speeches were short, infrequent and tightly controlled, but every appearance was amplified online through carefully edited clips, viral videos and highly shareable social media content.

One edited selfie video filmed by Vijay during a party conference in Madurai reportedly attracted nearly 90 million views within 24 hours.

Supporters rapidly repackaged his speeches into Instagram Reels and YouTube Shorts, flooding messaging groups and social media feeds with campaign material that reached millions of younger voters.

Analysts say Vijay’s cinematic image also played a crucial role in translating his celebrity status into political support.

Over three decades in Tamil cinema, Vijay frequently portrayed anti-corruption heroes and defenders of the poor, cultivating an image of resistance against injustice and inequality that resonated strongly with working-class voters and younger audiences.

That persona carried directly into his political messaging, where he positioned himself as a reformist outsider promising clean governance and social justice.

One of Vijay’s greatest political assets proved to be the vast organisational machinery built over his long film career.

His network of approximately 85,000 fan clubs across Tamil Nadu effectively transformed into a ready-made political ground operation, combining local activism with sophisticated digital outreach.

Despite campaign interruptions caused by logistical issues and security concerns following a deadly crowd crush at one of his rallies last September, the momentum generated online continued to build throughout the election period.

The scale of TVK’s success has now triggered wider debate across India over whether digital campaigning, celebrity influence and decentralised supporter networks could fundamentally reshape future elections in the world’s largest democracy. - May 11, 2026