Kavitha likens Owaisi brothers to sunflowers, jabs Akbaruddin’s quip.
Kavitha mocks Asaduddin: blasts Congress nationally, buddies Revanth locally.
Sunflower Spin: Kavitha Slams Owaisi Brothers’ Power-Chasing Flip-Flops
Hyderabad’s political pot boiled over Tuesday as Telangana Jagruthi president and ex-MLC Kalvakuntla Kavitha unleashed a sunflower barb at the Owaisi brothers—Asaduddin and Akbaruddin—ripping into their alleged power pivots. “Like sunflowers, they always turn toward the sun in charge,” she quipped, drawing chuckles and cheers from BRS loyalists weary of AIMIM’s dance.
Kavitha’s zinger reacted to Akbaruddin Owaisi’s Monday rally roar in Karimnagar, 150 km from Hyderabad. The AIMIM firebrand boasted: “Chief ministers don’t court us—we’re the magnet! Every CM scrambles to align. Without Majlis muscle, would Congress’s ‘chota feku’ snag Jubilee Hills bypoll?” He flexed AIMIM’s “strength,” claiming respect flows to the Owaisi duo, not vice versa. Crowd thundered approval, but Kavitha wasn’t buying it.
Her counterpunch dug deep into history. “They opposed Telangana’s birth tooth and nail,” she fumed, voice thick with betrayal. “Yet post-2014 statehood, they cozy up to BRS government like old pals.” Now, Asaduddin blasts Congress nationally from Delhi’s ramparts, but in Telangana? “He’s Revanth Reddy’s bestie,” Kavitha scoffed, painting a picture of opportunistic hugs that irk true regional hearts.
The sunflower metaphor landed like a Telangana thunderclap—simple, vivid, stinging. Sunflowers track the sun for survival; Kavitha accused the brothers of chasing power’s glow, flipping loyalties with the winds. BRS workers nodded, recalling AIMIM’s pre-statehood resistance, now morphed into bypoll kingmakers propping Revanth’s Congress.
Akbaruddin’s bravado echoed AIMIM’s street-smart clout in Old City and beyond. Jubilee Hills win? Undeniable boost. But Kavitha’s rip exposes the flip: foes turned friends when votes align. Asaduddin’s national anti-Congress fire contrasts his local Revanth bromance—selective outrage that fuels Hyderabad whispers of “power plants” over principles.
For Telangana’s soul, this hits home. Statehood was blood, sweat, tears—a dream Kavitha’s family championed. Owaisis’ about-face? Salt in wounds. Yet AIMIM’s base cheers the muscle; Karimnagar erupted for Akbaruddin’s defiance. Politics here thrives on such spice—rallies pulsing with passion, barbs drawing blood.
Kavitha’s sunflower shot rallies BRS faithful, questions AIMIM’s spine. Will Owaisis wilt or bloom bolder? In Hyderabad’s hustings, every jab sows seeds for 2028 battles. Sunflowers or strategists? Voters decide, hearts tugged by loyalty and power’s pull.
