Telangana Jagruti President Kalvakuntla Kavitha met Telangana Election Commission Commissioner Rani Kumudini and submitted a complaint against CM Revanth Reddy.
She demanded action, alleging that public money is being used to campaign for Gram Panchayat elections under the guise of official tours.
Kavitha told the Commissioner that objections were raised the moment the CM's tour schedule was announced during the Sarpanch election period. According to her, public meetings in urban areas are being used to indirectly seek votes with taxpayer money.
She also stressed that election rules were applied strictly in the past but later relaxed within municipal limits. Kavitha said the CM is exploiting these gaps and even used government funds to bring school children to a recent meeting.
In her letter, she asked the Election Commission to stop the CM's tour immediately and called upon the Central Election Commission to intervene. She claimed free and fair elections will remain impossible if such activities are allowed to continue.
However, public opinion remains split over Kavitha's political positioning. Many believe Kavitha is trying to project neutrality after breaking away from BRS, while some see her as leaning towards Congress and CM Revanth Reddy.
Reports earlier claimed the Congress High Command had offered Kavitha an entry, though she reportedly stayed undecided. Now, her stronger attacks on Congress appear aimed at countering those rumours and reshaping perception.
Yet questions remain. Addressing election issues is one thing, but avoiding the electoral battlefield is another. If real support exists, candidates must be fielded or backed on the ground.
No political leader builds credibility from the sidelines. Results come only from elections. Win or lose, elections test influence in real terms.
By delaying party formation and staying away from contests, Kavitha appears to be buying time through statements alone. Headlines offer visibility, not political weight.
Since her suspension from BRS, media attention has already dipped. It will fall further unless action replaces announcements.
If survival in Telangana politics matters, the moment to step forward is now. Otherwise, the impact will fade faster than the noise.

