After BRS exit, K Kavitha in talks with Prashant Kishor on launching new party
Kavitha discussed launching her party and the political space in Telangana for it and other relevant issues.
PTI
-
Kavitha is the president of Telangana Jagruthi, a cultural organisation (PTI)
Hyderabad, 19 Jan
Former CM K Chandrasekhar Rao's daughter K Kavitha is in talks with election strategist Prashant Kishor over launching her proposed political party, Telangana Jagruthi sources said on Monday.
Kavitha is the president of Telangana Jagruthi, a cultural organisation.
The
former MP held confabulations with Kishor when he was in Hyderabad for five days
recently, they said. Kishor is also the founder of the Bihar-based political party,
Jan Suraaj.
Kavitha
discussed launching her party and the political space in Telangana for it and
other relevant issues, the sources added.
Kavitha, daughter of BRS president and former Chief Minister Rao, was suspended from the
party in September 2025 after she accused her cousins and leaders T Harish Rao
and J Santosh Kumar of "tarnishing" her father's image over the
Kaleshwaram lift irrigation project built during the BRS regime.
Since
her suspension, the former MLC has been focusing on public issues under the
banner of Telangana Jagruti.
She had
submitted her resignation from the Legislative Council soon after her
suspension from BRS in September, 2025.
It was
accepted by the Council Chairman, Gutha Sukhender Reddy, earlier this month.
Accusing
both the BRS and ruling Congress of "corruption and irregularities",
Kavitha had in December last year said that she would become the chief minister
one day and conduct a probe into all the "injustices" committed since
Telangana's formation in 2014.
She has
also announced that her political platform would contest the next assembly
elections in the state.
Earlier
this month, Kavitha hit out at her father KCR-led party, alleging corruption in
Telangana during the previous BRS regime and also called the BRS Constitution a
"joke".
She also
said she was not party to certain "unpopular" decisions during the
BRS rule.
Leave a Reply
Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *




