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TVK's First Tamil Nadu Assembly Session Begins Sans Controversy; State Anthem Sung Before National Anthem

The first session of Tamil Nadu’s 17th Legislative Assembly opened in Chennai on Thursday with a visible change in ceremonial order. The proceedings began with Tamil Thai Vazhthu, the state anthem, followed immediately by the national anthem before the Governor’s address. The move drew attention because the national anthem is usually sung at the end of the day’s business.

The sequence appeared designed to address a political dispute that began during the new Council of Ministers’ swearing-in ceremony in May. At that event, held at Raj Bhavan, Tamil Thai Vazhthu was sung after Vande Mataram and the national anthem, triggering criticism from several state parties including the DMK.

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Tamil Nadu's 17th Legislative Assembly convened in Chennai, opening ceremonies with the state anthem Tamil Thai Vazhthu followed immediately by the national anthem before Governor Arlekar's address, resolving a protocol dispute.
TVK s First Tamil Nadu Assembly Session Begins Sans Controversy State Anthem Sung Before National Anthem

Tamil Thai Vazhthu comes first in Assembly protocol

The Assembly met at 10 am at the Secretariat in Chennai. As members gathered for the opening sitting, Tamil Thai Vazhthu, beginning with the words 'Neerarum Kadaludutha', was sung first. The national anthem, “Jana Gana Mana”, was then sung with full formal respect before Governor Rajendra Vishwanath Arlekar began his customary address.

This marked a departure from the long-followed Assembly convention for sessions beginning with the Governor’s address. Under the usual practice, Tamil Thai Vazhthu is sung at the start of proceedings. The Governor’s address and the scheduled business follow. The national anthem is then sung at the close of the sitting.

By placing the national anthem immediately after Tamil Thai Vazhthu, the Assembly avoided leaving it until the end while retaining the state song as the opening invocation. The change gave the sitting a strong political subtext, especially after weeks of debate over protocol, language identity and the role of state traditions in official ceremonies.

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Why the order became a political issue

The controversy gathered pace after the May 10 swearing-in ceremony of the Cabinet led by Chief Minister C. Joseph Vijay. Political parties in Tamil Nadu objected to the order of songs at Raj Bhavan, where the state invocation was not placed first. The decision was linked to a Union Home Ministry circular on ceremonial protocol at events involving Governors.

Several alliance partners of the ruling side, including the VCK and Left parties, had argued that Tamil Thai Vazhthu should not be pushed down in Tamil Nadu’s official order. Opposition parties also criticised the Raj Bhavan sequence, saying the state’s linguistic and cultural identity had to be respected in constitutional events held within Tamil Nadu.

The issue became more than a ceremonial disagreement because Tamil Thai Vazhthu has long carried political and cultural significance in the state. It is treated as Tamil Nadu’s state song and is used in government functions, educational institutions and public events. Its placement at the beginning of official programmes is seen by many parties as a marker of Tamil identity.

That is why Thursday’s Assembly sitting was closely watched. The Governor’s address is a constitutional event, and the first day of a new Assembly session carries symbolic importance. The question before the sitting was whether the House would follow its established state convention or alter the order in response to the Union circular cited earlier.

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A careful balance between state identity and national protocol

The adopted sequence offered a middle path, though not without a political message. Tamil Thai Vazhthu remained the first song heard in the House. The national anthem was also accorded prominence by being sung before the Governor’s address, rather than at the end of the day’s proceedings.

Political observers viewed the order as an attempt to assert the Assembly’s convention while avoiding any impression of disrespect to national symbols. The arrangement allowed the government to signal that Tamil Nadu’s state tradition would remain intact, even as national protocol was formally observed in the presence of the Governor.

Before the session began, leaders from the ruling alliance had publicly maintained that Tamil Thai Vazhthu must be sung first in the Assembly. Minister Vanni Arasu and others had described it as a core cultural marker for Tamils. Thursday’s proceedings closely reflected that position, while also giving the national anthem an early place in the ceremony.

The development is likely to shape political exchanges during the session. The Governor’s address usually sets out the government’s policy priorities and legislative direction. This time, however, the ceremonial order itself became the first major talking point, underlining how protocol questions can turn into wider debates over federalism and identity.

For the ruling side, the sequence may be presented as a defence of state autonomy and Tamil cultural pride. For critics, the debate may continue over whether such changes should be codified in Assembly rules or left to convention. Either way, the opening day showed that symbolic issues remain central to Tamil Nadu’s political language.

The first session of the 17th Assembly has therefore begun with more than a formal Governor’s address. It has opened with a recalibrated protocol that places Tamil Thai Vazhthu first, gives the national anthem an immediate place, and signals that questions of identity, ceremony and constitutional practice will remain politically significant in the state.

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