Tamil Nadu Proposes Bill to Ban Hindi Hoardings, Movies, Songs: Constitutional Compliance Stressed

Tamil Nadu Proposes Bill to Ban Hindi Hoardings, Movies, Songs: Constitutional Compliance Stressed

In a significant move aimed at protecting regional language interests, the Tamil Nadu government is set to table a bill in the state assembly seeking to ban Hindi hoardings, boards, movies, and songs across the state. Sources indicate that an emergency consultation with legal experts was held last night to ensure that the legislation aligns with constitutional provisions.

Bill Aims and Objectives

The proposed bill intends to prohibit the imposition of Hindi in public spaces and entertainment mediums within Tamil Nadu. Officials emphasized that the measure will fully comply with the Indian Constitution, balancing linguistic pride with legal safeguards.

Senior DMK leader TKS Elangovan stated,

“We won’t do anything against the Constitution. We will abide by it. We are against the imposition of Hindi.”

The move comes amid growing debates over language imposition in southern India, reflecting regional sensitivities and efforts to promote Tamil language and culture.

Political Reactions

The proposal has drawn sharp criticism from the BJP. Party leader Vinoj Selvam called the bill “stupid and absurd”, arguing that language should not be used as a political tool.

Selvam further suggested that the DMK government, facing setbacks in recent legal matters including Thiruparankundram, Karur probe, and Armstrong cases, may be using the Hindi imposition debate as a diversion from controversial issues such as the Foxconn investment project.

Tamil Identity in Public Policy

This is not the first instance of Tamil Nadu promoting Tamil in official contexts. In March 2025, the MK Stalin government replaced the national rupee symbol () with the Tamil letter ‘ரு’ (ru) in the 2025–26 state budget logo. While this sparked criticism from BJP leaders and Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, the DMK defended it as a symbolic effort to celebrate Tamil language and identity rather than reject national symbols.

With the new bill, Tamil Nadu seeks to assert its linguistic and cultural identity, while legal experts and political observers watch closely to ensure it respects constitutional boundaries.

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