Kondapalli Seetharamaiah, at a young age, joined the communist movements. He went on to become the Krishna District Secretary of the Communist Party of India. His CPI unit was active during the Telangana Rebellion. When the Communist Party of India was divided in 1964, Seetharamaiah withdrew from political life. He began working as a Hindi teacher at St. Gabriel's High School in Warangal. In Warangal he befriended K.G. Sathyamurthy. Both men joined the Communist Party of India. Seetharamaiah became a member of the Andhra Pradesh State Committee of CPI. When the Communist Party of India was torn by internal strife, Seetharamaiah joined the Central Organising Committee, Communist Party of India in 1972. In August 1974, the Andhra Pradesh State Committee of COC, CPI was organised, with Seetharamaiah as one of its three members. On 26 April 1977 Seetharamaiah was arrested in Nagpur, when police caught him with weapons in a vehicle. He was released on bail, but absconded and went underground. In 1977 he broke away from COC, CPI. On 22 April 1980 he founded the Communist Party of India People's War. On 2 January 1982 he was arrested in Hyderabad at Begumpet Railway Station, when waiting to board a train to Bombay. On 4 January 1984 he managed to escape from the prisoners wing of the Osmania Hospital. Following an internal dispute, which ended with the expulsion of K.G. Sathyamurthy and Byreddy Sathyanarayana Reddy, Seetharamaiah's hold over the party strengthened. Sathyamurthy had begun questioning Maoist character of the party, on the lines of Deng Xiaoping. Reddy had opposed Sathyamurthy's ouster. In 1991, Seetharamaiah was ousted from the party. In 1993, he was caught by police in his home village. After few years in prison, he was acquitted and released on humanitarian grounds.
Final years
During his final years, he abstained from political activities. He suffered from Alzeihmer's disease. Kondapalli Seetharamaiah died in his granddaughter's house in Vijayawada on 12 April 2002. He was 87 years old. He was survived by his wife Koteswaramma and two granddaughters, K. Anuradha and K. Sudha. Funeral services were arranged the next day. According to press reports, only a handful of people turned up.