"They (Palaniswami regime) will not be able to involve themselves in efforts to implement the schemes," he said.
He wondered how the government would be able to deliver on such promises "when Tamil Nadu is reeling under a huge debt of Rs five lakh crore".
The DMK leader said Palaniswami's announcements were like that of his predecessors Panneerselvam and Jayalalithaa.
On February 20, two days after he took over, Palaniswami had announced several welfare measures, including grant of subsidy to one lakh working women every year for purchase of mopeds or scooters and closure of 500 more state-run TASMAC liquor outlets, taking the total number of such shops shut since last year to 1,000.
Referring to closure of 500 IMFL shops in 2016 after Jayalalithaa had assumed office, the DMK leader sought to know if government was ready to release a 'white paper' on the liquor outlets closed by the late Chief Minister.
He was winding up a day-long hunger strike by DMK here as part of state-wide protests over "murder of democracy" in the Assembly on February 18 when Chief Minister Palaniswami won a trust vote after eviction of DMK members.
"Get ready to remove the proxy, atrocious regime. Let us prepare ourselves for it," Stalin, who led the DMK protest here, said. IUML leader K M Kader Mohideen was among those who participated in the fast.
Citing suspicions from some quarters over Jayalalithaa's death, Stalin said that the first announcement "after DMK comes to power" would be an order for a judicial inquiry into her death. "No one has locus standi to stop the inquiry," he said.
"If the state moves on under such circumstances, who will save Tamil Nadu and its people? Will this hunger strike be enough?... No," he said.
Stalin said he would head a DMK delegation to Delhi tomorrow to submit a memorandum to President Pranab Mukherjee, seeking a judicial inquiry (into the recent happenings in the Assembly)," he said.
Attacking the Palaniswami government, Stalin said: "People
voted in favour of AIADMK for Jayalalithaa to become Chief Minister and not for this regime which is led by proxy and you should understand this."
Till the "proxy regime" is ousted, his party has no other priority and "We have to save Tamil Nadu," he said.
Claiming that the Palaniswami regime would not last long as people were against it, he said "This is will be overthrown."
However, Stalin said DMK would not try to make a backdoor entry to rule the state.
On Jayalalithaa's 75-days hospitalisation, he said there was no authentic, periodical official information about her health status from the government.
Stalin alleged that the explanations given by doctors including UK-based specialist Dr Richard Beale recently on the treatment given to Jayalalithaa were contradictory when viewed alongside the bulletins issued earlier by Apollo Hospitals.
Referring to a slew of issues facing Tamil Nadu including recent deaths of farmers due to various reasons, crimes against women and children, he said "we should prepare to face it ourselves, like DMK's Namakku Name (we for ourselves) initiative.
