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  1. Speaker Pandian was a supporter of Janaki. He did not recognize the Jayalalithaa group as a separate party. On 28 January 1988, Janaki sought a vote of confidence in the Assembly. The Jayalalithaa group abstained from the assembly and Pandian disqualified all of them.

  2. Jan 4, 2020 · However, later Pandian maintained that though the House was dissolved, he remained Speaker! In the subsequent elections to the State Assembly in 1989, the Janaki group suffered a massive defeat, with Pandian, the only one another Janaki loyalist getting elected to the Assembly.

  3. The next day, two supporters of Jayalalithaa — V. Karuppusamy Pandian and S. Navaneethakrishnan — were removed from party posts.

  4. Speaker Pandian was a supporter of Janaki. He did not recognize the Jayalalithaa group as a separate party. On 28 January 1988, Janaki sought a vote of confidence in the Assembly. The Jayalalithaa group abstained from the assembly and Pandian disqualified all of them.

  5. Jan 4, 2020 · In the 1989 Assembly polls, he was the only nominee of the AIADMK (Janaki faction) to win. Mr. P.H. Pandian emerged into prominence when he became the 11 Assembly Speaker in February 1985, a...

  6. Mar 22, 2017 · In 1991, groups led by former Speaker P.H. Pandian and former Minister S. Thirunavukkarasar (now president of the Tamil Nadu Congress Committee) had also sought the ‘two leaves’ symbol.

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  8. Aug 2, 2022 · Speaker PH Pandian went on to expel thirty-three members -- supporters of Jayalalithaa -- under the 1985 anti-defection law and proclaim Janaki the winner. Pandemonium ensued.