Published May 25, 2026 | Version v1

Driving Political Transformation Through Disruptive Innovation: A Framework for New-Entrant Party Strategy in India's Evolving Democracy-Evidence from the Rise of Tamilaga Vettri Kazhagam (TVK)

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New political actors in established democracies raise key issues regarding the disruptive effects of new technologies on electoral competition, voter mobilization, and the design of political parties and organizations. This study focuses on the emergence of film actor Vijay's Tamilaga Vettri Kazhagam (TVK), which went to the 2026 Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly (TNA) elections as a single party. The paper proposes a six-prong strategy for political change based on a case-study approach and secondary data analysis of campaign metrics, voter turnout data (85.1%), demographic distribution data and digital outreach footprints: (1) demographic targeting, (2) digital-first mobilization, (3) symbolic brand identity, (4) welfare-centric policy bundling, (5) ideological repositioning, and (6) organizational conversion of cultural capital. It was found that TVK's approach of mobilizing 85,000 fan clubs into 70,000 booth level agents, with a special thrust on the large youth population (between 20 and 40 years, or about 2.28 crore voters) created a shock among the traditional Dravidian parties. The study provides a replicable model for party strategy when they are new, and theoretical understanding on how cultural followings can become institutionalized and become a part of the electoral infrastructure. Implications are drawn on political marketing, governance accountability, and the future of three cornered contest in the Indian states from 2026 onwards.

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