Tamil Nadu Chief Minister MK Stalin appears to have played peacemaker in a high-voltage family feud that threatened to rattle the DMK’s financial backbone. In a dramatic behind-the-scenes intervention, Stalin along with his son Udhayanidhi Stalin is said to have brokered a temporary truce between the warring Maran brothers: media baron Kalanithi Maran and DMK MP Dayanidhi Maran. Why this urgency? Because insiders say the Marans are the primary financiers of the DMK’s election machinery often referred to in whispers as the “ATM brothers”. With Tamil Nadu headed for high-stakes assembly elections in 2026 Stalin could hardly afford his party’s money machines to be in meltdown. But while the smoke signals of peace have emerged, the question remains: is this just a temporary patch-up or the calm before another storm?
Blood, Business, and Feud
The feud between Kalanithi Maran, the chairman of Sun TV Network and one of India’s richest businessmen, and his younger brother Dayanidhi Maran, former Union Minister and a sitting DMK MP, has been brewing for years but boiled over recently. What started as a boardroom battle became an ugly public spectacle when Dayanidhi served a scathing legal notice to Kalanithi on June 10, 2025. The notice accused Kalanithi of orchestrating a fraudulent takeover of Sun TV’s shares after their father Murasoli Maran’s death in 2003.
The allegations were explosive: cheating, money laundering, and criminal breach of trust. According to the notice, Kalanithi allotted himself 12 lakh equity shares at just Rs 10 each when their real value was between Rs 2,500 and Rs 3,000 thereby securing 60% control over Sun TV, while other legal heirs were allegedly left out of the picture. The document also alleged that dividends worth Rs 5,926 crore in 2023 and Rs 455 crore in 2024 were pocketed by Kalanithi, leading to demands for restitution and investigation by the Serious Fraud Investigation Office (SFIO).
CM Stalin Steps In With Help
Faced with the threat of a public scandal that could embarrass the DMK and destabilize its well-oiled election machinery, Chief Minister MK Stalin sprung into action. Alongside his son Udhayanidhi Stalin, Stalin reportedly convened a meeting between the Maran brothers. Present at this high-stakes negotiation table were not just the brothers but also their sister Anbukarasi, believed to be a silent yet influential figure in the family.
But Stalin’s mediation didn’t stop there. Recognizing the limitations of political authority in a deep-rooted family rift, he turned to elder statesmen and trusted family confidants. Dravidar Kazhagam president K Veeramani and journalist N Ram were brought in as neutral parties to steer the talks. Over three rounds of discussions two in person and one via video call a deal was reportedly thrashed out.
Cash, Land, and a Price for Peace
According to insiders, the eventual settlement was as grand as the stakes involved. Dayanidhi Maran is believed to have walked away with a compensation package of nearly Rs 800 crore in cash. But that’s not all. Reports suggest he also received four high-value plots of land in Chennai’s ultra-premium Boat Club area assets that easily rival the cash in worth. This eye-popping truce is now being whispered about in Chennai’s power circles as “the cost of silence”.
This wasn’t the first time money changed hands in this feud. A previous notice issued by Dayanidhi in October 2024 had reportedly led to Kalanithi paying their sister Anbukarasi Rs 500 crore in a similar hush-hush settlement. Whether this latest peace accord involved a reshuffling of Sun TV shares or a clean break via financial compensation remains unclear.
A Fragile Truce or Strategic Delay?
Despite the grand display of unity and Stalin’s diplomatic finesse questions linger over the durability of this truce. The legal notice painted a clear picture of betrayal and greed. Kalanithi’s current 75% ownership of Sun TV, worth billions, didn’t materialise overnight. The allegations speak of long-standing grievances that go far beyond temporary fixes.
Sources within the DMK say the timing of this reconciliation isn’t coincidental. With elections around the corner, the last thing Stalin wants is his party’s biggest funders making headlines for all the wrong reasons. The Marans, through their vast media empire and deep pockets, are reportedly instrumental in financing the DMK’s poll campaigns.
But will this peace last beyond the 2026 election cycle? Or is this simply a pause in hostilities a strategic timeout before old wounds reopen?
All’s Calm For Now
MK Stalin’s role as the family mediator may have saved the DMK from a major embarrassment for now. The Maran brothers appear to have buried the hatchet, albeit under a mountain of cash and real estate. But the cracks in the foundation remain. As one observer quipped, “The ATMs may be back online, but how long before one of them runs out of patience again?”
Tamil Nadu’s political and media landscapes are intricately intertwined, and with the 2026 elections approaching, all eyes will be on whether this temporary truce transforms into lasting peace or whether the Maran feud resurfaces once the ballots are cast and counted.




























