A grey, overcast morning over Chennai seemed symbolic as early counting trends in the Tamil Nadu Assembly elections pointed to a potentially dramatic political shift in the Dravidian state.
The Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK), whose rising sun symbol has long dominated the State’s political imagery, was trailing in the first three hours of counting.
TVK surges ahead in debut outing
In contrast, the debutant Tamilaga Vettri Kazhagam (TVK), led by actor-turned-politician Joseph Vijay, surged ahead, capturing early momentum and public attention.
By around 11 am, trends across the 234 constituencies showed TVK leading in 101 seats — still 17 short of the majority mark of 118, but well ahead of its rivals. The All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam followed with 67 seats, while the ruling DMK alliance lagged at 46. The Pattali Makkal Katchi (PMK), aligned with the AIADMK, was ahead in seven seats.
Tight margins keep outcome uncertain
What makes the trends more striking is the narrow margin separating candidates in several constituencies, suggesting that the final outcome could still shift as counting progresses.
High-profile contests add drama
In a series of upsets, the high-profile contests added to the unfolding drama, with Chief Minister M K Stalin and his son Udhayanidhi Stalin reportedly trailing behind TVK candidates in early rounds. Several ministers in the incumbent Cabinet were also locked in tight contests.
Hung Assembly possibility emerges
If these trends hold, TVK could emerge as the single largest party, though short of a majority- raising the strong possibility of a hung Assembly. Notably, TVK has maintained that any post-poll alliance would have to accept Vijay as Chief Minister.
Should that scenario play out, Tamil Nadu could be on course to see one of its youngest Chief Ministers.
Counting continues as picture remains fluid
With counting still underway, the political picture remains fluid.
Clearer trends are expected to emerge in the next few hours — but the early signals already hint at a possible generational shift, with the contours of a Gen-Z political moment beginning to take shape in Tamil Nadu.
Published on May 4, 2026


























