Are DMK-AIADMK Sidelining Muslim Candidates? Data Shows Decline In Community's Representation In TN Politics
Despite constituting approximately 6 to 7 per cent of Tamil Nadu's population, the Muslim community is witnessing a steady erosion of its direct representation within the state's two major Dravidian parties.
As Tamil Nadu gears up for the 2026 Assembly elections, electoral data highlights a sustained downward trend in the number of Muslim candidates fielded by both the ruling DMK and the opposition AIADMK-a pattern that has been quietly unfolding over the last fifteen years.
AI-generated summary, reviewed by editors

A Decadal Shift in Numbers
Two decades ago, it was common for the DMK and AIADMK to field several Muslim candidates under their own iconic party symbols-the Rising Sun and the Two Leaves, respectively. However, a visible rollback began following the 2011 elections, according to a report in DTNext.
The following table illustrates the trajectory of Muslim candidates fielded directly by the two major parties over the last five electoral cycles:
| Election Year | DMK Candidates | AIADMK Candidates |
|---|---|---|
| 2006 | 7 | 4 |
| 2011 | 7 | 3 |
| 2016 | 5 | 5 |
| 2021 | 3 | 1 |
| 2026 (Upcoming) | 3 | 1 |
While both parties showed a marginal leveling in 2016, the drop-off in 2021 was severe. For the upcoming 2026 polls, the DMK has stagnated at three candidates, while the AIADMK remains limited to a single Muslim candidate, the report said.
It has to be noted that the AIADMK is in alliance with the BJP.
Outsourcing Representation to Allies
Rather than fielding minority candidates from their own primary ranks, the Dravidian majors have increasingly adopted a strategy of allocating seats to Muslim-centric parties within their broader electoral alliances. Yet, even this delegated representation appears to be shrinking:
Indian Union Muslim League (IUML): A long-standing ally of the DMK, the IUML was allocated three constituencies in the 2021 elections. For the 2026 elections, their share has been reduced to just two seats.
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Manithaneya Makkal Katchi (MMK): Led by prominent political figure M.H. Jawahirullah, the MMK contested two seats in 2021. Despite publicly seeking an increased allocation for 2026, the party has been capped at two seats once again.
This localized trend in Tamil Nadu mirrors a much larger, systemic issue across Indian politics. Political scientists and studies tracking democratic governance such as the extensive research by scholar Iqbal Ansari have consistently highlighted the chronic under-representation of Muslims in state and national legislative bodies. Even though Tamil Nadu's Muslim population hovers around 6-7 per cent, their overall representation in the State Assembly has historically averaged less than 3 per cent.
This modern bottleneck stands in stark contrast to Tamil Nadu's rich legacy of influential Muslim political leaders. The state's political history was profoundly shaped by figures like M. Muhammad Ismail (often referred to as Quaid-e-Millat), the revered founder of the Indian Union Muslim League, and A.K.A. Abdul Samad.
Today, leaders like M.H. Jawahirullah and K.M. Kader Mohideen continue to carry the mantle, but the shrinking seat allocations suggest that the burden of community representation is being relegated entirely to smaller alliance partners, rather than being integrated into the mainstream ranks of the state's largest parties.
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