Telangana MLA's Pledge: Ready to Resign on CM Revanth Reddy's Order

A key Telangana MLA has put his political fate in the hands of the Chief Minister. Danam Nagender, a former minister, stated he is prepared to resign if CM Revanth Reddy directs him to do so. This comes amid an ongoing legal battle over the disqualification of BRS MLAs who switched to the Congress party. Nagender expressed confidence in his electoral experience and voiced strong support for the current Chief Minister's leadership.

Key Points: BRS MLA Nagender Says He Will Resign If CM Revanth Reddy Directs

  • Danam Nagender says he will follow CM Revanth Reddy's direction if asked to resign
  • The disqualification case for 10 BRS MLAs is currently before the Supreme Court
  • Nagender praises CM Reddy, saying Telangana will develop if he leads for 10 years
  • The Assembly Speaker has issued multiple notices to Nagender over the defection petitions
3 min read

Telangana MLA Nagender ready to resign on CM Revanth Reddy's direction

Former minister Danam Nagender, facing disqualification for switching to Congress, states he will resign if Chief Minister Revanth Reddy asks him to.

"Elections are not new to me. I have so far contested 11 times. - Danam Nagender"

Hyderabad, Dec 5

Former minister Danam Nagender, one of the 10 BRS MLAs facing disqualification for allegedly shifting loyalties to the ruling Congress party, said on Friday that he will resign if Chief Minister A. Revanth Reddy directs him to do so.

He said the proposal of resignation has not come up yet but if the Chief Minister wants him to resign he would follow his direction.

He told media persons that the matter of disqualification is before the Supreme Court. He said he would present his arguments in the case.

Nagender remarked that fighting and winning the elections is in his blood. "Elections are not new to me. I have so far contested 11 times," said the MLA from Khairatabad constituency in Hyderabad.

The former minister also stated that Telangana will march ahead on the path of development if Revanth Reddy continues as the Chief Minister for another 10 years.

Nagender recently sought more time to respond to the disqualification notice sent by Speaker Gaddam Prasad Kumar.

The Speaker has already completed hearing on the petitions for disqualification of eight MLAs who allegedly defected from the Bharat Rashtra Samithi (BRS) to the ruling Congress party.

The Speaker on November 20 issued fresh notices to Nagender and Kadiyam Srihari, directing them to respond by November 23. They both sought more time to respond. This was the third time the two MLAs were issued notices after they failed to respond to earlier notices.

BRS had filed petitions for disqualification of 10 MLAs who were elected to the Assembly on a BRS ticket in 2023 elections but switched loyalties to the Congress in 2024.

The Speaker has completed hearing on petitions for disqualification of eight MLAs -- Kale Yadaiah, Krishna Mohan Reddy, G. Mahipal Reddy, T. Prakash Goud, Sanjay Kumar, Arekapudi Gandhi, Pocharam Srinivas Reddy and Tellam Venkat Rao. After hearing arguments from both sides, the Speaker reserved its ordered.

While BRS complained that these MLAs openly joined Congress party and even sat in the Treasury Benches in the Assembly, the MLAs denied that they joined the ruling party. They contended that only met Chief Minister Revanth Reddy to seek funds for development of their constituencies.

The BRS brought to the notice of the Speaker that Nagender not only joined the Congress but also contested the 2024 Lok Sabha election from Secunderabad on a Congress ticket. It also alleged that Kadiyam Srihari openly campaigned for his daughter Kadiyam Kaviya, who contested Lok Sabha polls from Warangal constituency as the Congress candidate.

The Supreme Court, on November 17, issued a contempt notice to the Telangana speaker for not complying with its directive to decide on disqualification pleas against the 10 MLAs.

On July 31, a Bench headed by then Chief Justice B.R. Gavai had directed the Assembly Speaker to decide in three months the matter of the disqualification of the 10 MLAs.

The Bench termed the non-compliance of its earlier directions as the grossest kind of contempt while issuing notices to the Speaker and others on the pleas filed by the BRS leaders. The Bench also issued notice on a separate plea filed on behalf of the office of the Speaker seeking extension of time by eight more weeks to decide the disqualification pleas.

The Bench posted the matter for further hearing after four weeks.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

S
Shreya B
"If the CM directs me to resign..." What kind of statement is this? Shows complete lack of individual responsibility. An MLA's seat belongs to the people of the constituency, not to be offered up on the Chief Minister's whim. Very disappointing.
V
Vikram M
At least he is being honest about following the CM's direction. In Telangana, development has been stalled for too long due to political drama. If these MLAs can bring stability and funds for their areas, maybe it's for the best? 🤔 Just want good roads and schools.
A
Aman W
"Elections are in my blood" – this is the attitude! These career politicians treat public service like a family business. We need fresh faces who actually want to serve, not just win elections.
P
Priya S
The Speaker delaying the decision for so long is the real contempt of court. Supreme Court gave 3 months, it's been longer. No one respects the law anymore. This sets a very bad precedent for other states too.
K
Karthik V
Their excuse is they met the CM for "development funds". Seriously? 😂 If that's the criteria, then every opposition MLA will start crossing over. This whole episode is a farce. Hope the Supreme Court delivers a strong verdict.

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