The 84% Rebellion Telangana’s demographic majority is waking up to its political dispossession. The question is whether it can organise fast enough to seize power. In the high-stakes political theatre of Telangana, the script has long been written by a minority for the majority. A new caste survey, released in early 2025, has handed the opposition a stark arithmetic reality: the “Bahujan” collective—comprising Backward Classes (BCs), Scheduled Castes (SCs), and Scheduled Tribes (STs)—constitutes roughly 85% of the state’s population. Yet, the corridors of power remain the preserve of the landed elite, specifically the Reddy and Velama castes, who together account for less than 10% of the populace but dominate the state’s two major parties, the Bharat Rashtra Samithi (BRS) and the Congress. The survey, conducted between November 2024 and February 2025, did more than merely count heads; it exposed a chasm between demography and power. While the BCs make up 56.33% of th...
By Nagesh Bhushan Strategic Context: The Imperative for Bahujan Political Sovereignty The political landscape of Telangana is defined by a systemic "Power Gap": an 84% Bahujan majority—comprising Backward Classes (including BC Muslims), Scheduled Castes, and Scheduled Tribes—is structurally excluded by a duopoly of landed forward-castes (Reddys and Velamas). While forward castes represent less than 25% of the population, they exert near-total control over state resources. The strategic objective is to achieve vertical integration of this majority, breaking the BRS-Congress cycle by applying the TVK (Tamizhaga Vettri Kazhagam) precedent from Tamil Nadu. The TVK’s victory ended a 59-year Dravidian duopoly, proving that entrenched political monopolies collapse when popular social energy is converted into a disciplined institutional alternative. Demographic Reality vs. Political Representation Demographic Group Percentage of Population Current Pol...