Climate activist Licypriya Kangujam on Thursday urged Tamil Nadu Chief Minister Joseph Vijay to end the long-standing “towel culture” associated with VIP chairs in government offices and within a day, the symbolic change appeared to have quietly taken effect. Without any formal announcement or public statement, Vijay was seen using a chair without the customary white towel during official meetings on Friday. In a post on X, Kangujam had appealed to Vijay to set an example by discontinuing the practice of draping white towels over official chairs, a tradition commonly followed not just by ministers and senior bureaucrats, but also by lower-level government officials across India. She described the move as a small but meaningful step toward dismantling
visible symbols of hierarchy in public offices.Neither Vijay nor the Tamil Nadu government responded publicly to the appeal. However, photographs released by the Chief Minister’s Office hinted at a visible shift.
Hello @TVKVijayHQ Sir,Can we end this towel culture on VIP chairs in India 🇮🇳? People already know that CMs are VIPs in India. This towel culture is being followed by ministers, bureaucrats, and even small officers. You'r a great inspiration, Sir. You can start this change. ❤️🙏 pic.twitter.com/CB5dS8vHfr
— Licypriya Kangujam (@LicypriyaK) May 14, 2026
மாண்புமிகு தமிழ்நாடு முதலமைச்சர் திரு. ச. ஜோசப் விஜய் அவர்கள் தலைமையில் இன்று (14.5.2026) தலைமைச் செயலகத்தில், தொழில், முதலீட்டு ஊக்குவிப்பு மற்றும் வர்த்தகத் துறையின் செயல்பாடுகள் குறித்த ஆய்வுக் கூட்டம் நடைபெற்றது.#CMJosephVijay pic.twitter.com/4MexQK0EQt
— CMOTamilNadu (@CMOTamilnadu) May 14, 2026
Thanks, @TVKVijayHQ Sir. Your action proves that you are listening to the voices of common people. Change is coming, whether we like it or not. 🙏 Before After pic.twitter.com/8Ep5etc03d
— Licypriya Kangujam (@LicypriyaK) May 15, 2026









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