This post is a continuation to my previous posts about the problem of "South Asianism". You can read about Part One here and Part Two here. Especially in the Part One, I discussed about how it is illegal for especially Hindu minorities in Pakistan to contest in the big elections or hold any positions of power. There's similar, unofficial rule in Bangladesh as well. In India, Muslims can contest for big elections and hold considerable power, even though Indian opposition and leftists / liberals / seculars / Marxist Communists / Islamists / NGO missionaries / and other self-claimed progressive malcontents claim that "minorities" in India are oppressed.
Indian Christian leftist liberal feminist author and Booker Prize awardee Arundhati Roy (who omits her first name Suzanna for some strange reason) standing and laughing with Yasin Malik the terrorist.
Below, you can see a screenshot of Mehbooba Mufti's X post where she is lamenting the "ongoing victimization, dispossession and disempowerment of Muslims". Mehbooba Mufti is the daughter of Mufti Mohammad Sayeed, a Kashmiri Muslim politician who was the Home Minister of India during the exodus and genocide of Kashmiri Hindus in the 1990s. Just, let that sink in.
If this was not enough to convince you then let us take a look at another case.
The Pakistan high commission has been sending gifts to certain Indian politicians. Among them have been Muslim politicians such as Iqra Hasan aka Iqra Choudhary. She's from Kairana constituency. Do you know what happened in Kairana?
That's right, a Hindu exodus happened in Kairana. Why was Iqra Hasan aka Iqra Choudhary the Indian Muslim politician receiving mangoes from Pakistan until last year? Moreover, why were Indian opposition leader Rahul Gandhi aka Pappu, or lawyer politician Kapil Sibal aka the Wormtail receiving mangoes from Pakistan?
Rahul Gandhi, Raul Vinci, Pappu.. of course he would think that Hindus are a bigger threat than Lashkar-e-Taiba, a Pakistan origin Islamist terrorist group, that just 2 years prior to Pappu's statements, carried out the deadliest terror attack in India.
Kapil Sibal the Wormtail thinks that showing a documentary style film about the incident, where Islamist jihadists beheaded Hindu tailor Kanhaiya Lal for (allegedly) supporting Nupur Sharma (a BJP member who merely said that Prophet Muhammed married a 9-year-old) on his Whatsapp status, is heinous Islamophobia.
Here's a bonus:
For those who don't know or are too young to remember, the United Progressive Alliance (UPA) was a political alliance in India led by the Indian National Congress, which governed the country from 2004 until 2014 for two terms before losing power to the BJP-led National Democratic Alliance. The UPA was rebranded as the Indian National Developmental Inclusive Alliance on 18 July 2023, ahead of the 2024 general election. This is what Indian progressives were doing in India, empowering Pakistani terrorists Islamist Jihadists and villainising Hindus and contributing to Hindus exodus.
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Three big lessons from Narendra Modi's shocking underperformance in the 2024 election.
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi is, by some measures, the most popular leader in the world. Prior to the 2024 election, his Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) held an outright majority in the Lok Sabha (Indiaās Parliament) ā one that was widely projected to grow after the vote count. The party regularly boasted that it would win 400 Lok Sabha seats, easily enough to amend Indiaās constitution along the party's preferred Hindu nationalist lines.
But when the results were announced on Tuesday, the BJP held just 240 seats. They not only underperformed expectations, they actually lost their parliamentary majority. While Modi will remain prime minister, he will do so at the helm of a coalition governmentĀ āĀ meaning that he will depend on other parties to stay in office, making it harder to continue his ongoing assault on Indian democracy.
So what happened? Why did Indian voters deal a devastating blow to a prime minister who, by all measures, they mostly seem to like?
India is a massive countryĀ āĀ the most populous in the world āĀ and one of the most diverse, making its internal politics exceedingly complicated. A definitive assessment of the election would require granular data on voter breakdown across caste, class, linguistic, religious, age, and gender divides. At present, those numbers donāt exist in sufficient detail.Ā
But after looking at the information that is available and speaking with several leading experts on Indian politics, there are at least three conclusions that Iām comfortable drawing.
First, voters punished Modi for putting his Hindu nationalist agenda ahead of fixing Indiaās unequal economy. Second, Indian voters had some real concerns about the decline of liberal democracy under BJP rule. Third, the opposition parties waged a smart campaign that took advantage of Modiās vulnerabilities on the economy and democracy.
Understanding these factors isnāt just important for Indians. The countryās election has some universal lessons for how to beat a would-be authoritarian ā ones that Americans especially might want to heed heading into its election in November.
-via Vox, June 7, 2024. Article continues below.
A new (and unequal) economy
Modiās biggest and most surprising losses came in Indiaās two most populous states: Uttar Pradesh in the north and Maharashtra in the west. Both states had previously been BJP strongholds ā places where the partyās core tactic of pitting the Hindu majority against the Muslim minority had seemingly cemented Hindu support for Modi and his allies.
One prominent Indian analyst, Yogendra Yadav, saw the cracks in advance. Swimming against the tide of Indian media, he correctly predicted that the BJP would fall short of a governing majority.
Traveling through the country, but especially rural Uttar Pradesh, he prophesied āthe return of normal politicsā: that Indian voters were no longer held spellbound by Modiās charismatic nationalist appeals and were instead starting to worry about the way politics was affecting their lives.
Yadavās conclusions derived in no small part from hearing votersā concerns about the economy. The issue wasnāt GDP growth āĀ Indiaās is the fastest-growing economy in the world āĀ but rather the distribution of growthās fruits. While some of Modiās top allies struck it rich, many ordinary Indians suffered. Nearly half of all Indians between 20 and 24 are unemployed; Indian farmers have repeatedly protested Modi policies that they felt hurt their livelihoods.
āEveryone was talking about price rise, unemployment, the state of public services, the plight of farmers, [and] the struggles of labor,ā Yadav wrote...
āWe know for sure that Modiās strongman image and brassy self-confidence were not as popular with voters as the BJP assumed,ā says Sadanand Dhume, a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute who studies India.Ā
The lesson here isnāt that the pocketbook concerns trump identity-based appeals everywhere; recent evidence in wealthier democracies suggests the opposite is true. Rather, itās that even entrenched reputations of populist leaders are not unshakeable. When they make errors, even some time ago, itās possible to get voters to remember these mistakes and prioritize them over whatever culture war the populist is peddling at the moment.
Liberalism strikes back
The Indian constitution is a liberal document: It guarantees equality of all citizens and enshrines measures designed to enshrine said equality into law. The signature goal of Modiās time in power has been to rip this liberal edifice down and replace it with a Hindu nationalist model that pushes non-Hindus to the social margins. In pursuit of this agenda, the BJP has concentrated power in Modiās hands and undermined key pillars of Indian democracy (like a free press and independent judiciary).
Prior to the election, there was a sense that Indian voters either didnāt much care about the assault on liberal democracy or mostly agreed with it. But the BJPās surprising underperformance suggests otherwise.
The Hindu, a leading Indian newspaper, published an essential post-election data analysis breaking down what we know about the results. One of the more striking findings is that the opposition parties surged in parliamentary seats reserved for members of āscheduled castesāĀ ā the legal term for Dalits, the lowest caste grouping in the Hindu hierarchy.
Caste has long been an essential cleavage in Indian politics, with Dalits typically favoring the left-wing Congress party over the BJP (long seen as an upper-caste party). Under Modi, the BJP had seemingly tamped down on the salience of class by elevating all Hindus ā including Dalits ā over Muslims. Yet now itās looking like Dalits were flocking back to Congress and its allies. Why?
According to experts, Dalit voters feared the consequences of a BJP landslide. If Modiās party achieved its 400-seat target, theyād have more than enough votes to amend Indiaās constitution. Since the constitution contains several protections designed to promote Dalit equality ā including a first-in-the-world affirmative action system āĀ that seemed like a serious threat to the community. It seems, at least based on preliminary data, that they voted accordingly.
The Dalit vote is but one example of the ways in which Modiās brazen willingness to assail Indian institutions likely alienated voters.
Uttar Pradesh (UP), Indiaās largest and most electorally important state, was the site of a major BJP anti-Muslim campaign. It unofficially kicked off its campaign in the UP city of Ayodhya earlier this year, during a ceremony celebrating one of Modiās crowning achievements: the construction of a Hindu temple on the site of a former mosque that had been torn down by Hindu nationalists in 1992.Ā
Yet not only did the BJP lose UP, it specifically lost the constituency ā the city of Faizabad ā in which the Ayodhya temple is located. Itās as direct an electoral rebuke to BJP ideology as one can imagine.
In Maharashtra, the second largest state, the BJP made a tactical alliance with a local politician, Ajit Pawar, facing serious corruption charges. Voters seemingly punished Modiās party for turning a blind eye to Pawarās offenses against the public trust. Across the country, Muslim voters turned out for the opposition to defend their rights against Modiās attacks.
The global lesson here is clear: Even popular authoritarians can overreach.
By turning ā400 seatsā into a campaign slogan, an all-but-open signal that he intended to remake the Indian state in his illiberal image, Modi practically rang an alarm bell for constituencies worried about the consequences. So they turned out to stop him en masse.
The BJPās electoral underperformance is, in no small part, the direct result of their leaderās zealotry going too far.
Return of the Gandhis?Ā
Of course, Modiās mistakes might not have mattered had his rivals failed to capitalize. The Indian opposition, however, was far more effective than most observers anticipated.
Perhaps most importantly, the many opposition parties coordinated with each other. Forming a united bloc called INDIA (Indian National Developmental Inclusive Alliance), they worked to make sure they werenāt stealing votes from each other in critical constituencies, positioning INDIA coalition candidates to win straight fights against BJP rivals.
The leading party in the opposition bloc āĀ Congress āĀ was also more put together than people thought. Its most prominent leader, Rahul Gandhi, was widely dismissed as a dilettante nepo baby: a pale imitation of his father Rajiv and grandmother Indira, both former Congress prime ministers. Now his critics are rethinking things.
āI owe Rahul Gandhi an apology because I seriously underestimated him,ā says Manjari Miller, a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations.
Miller singled out Gandhiās yatras (marches) across India as a particularly canny tactic. These physically grueling voyages across the length and breadth of India showed that he wasnāt just a privileged son of Indian political royalty, but a politician willing to take risks and meet ordinary Indians where they were. During the yatras, he would meet directly with voters from marginalized groups and rail against Modiās politics of hate.
āThe persona heās developed ā as somebody kind, caring, inclusive, [and] resolute in the face of bullying ā has really worked and captured the imagination of younger India,ā says Suryanarayan. āIf youāve spent any time on Instagram Reels, [youāll see] an entire generation now waking up to Rahul Gandhiās very appealing videos.ā
This, too, has a lesson for the rest of the world: Tactical innovation from the opposition matters even in an unfair electoral context.
There is no doubt that, in the past 10 years, the BJP stacked the political deck against its opponents. They consolidated control over large chunks of the national media, changed campaign finance law to favor themselves, suborned the famously independent Indian Electoral Commission, and even intimidated the Supreme Court into letting them get away with it.Ā
The opposition, though, managed to find ways to compete even under unfair circumstances. Strategic coordination between them helped consolidate resources and ameliorate the BJP cash advantage. Direct voter outreach like the yatra helped circumvent BJP dominance in the national media.
To be clear, the opposition still did not win a majority. Modi will have a third term in office, likely thanks in large part to the ways he rigged the system in his favor.
Yet there is no doubt that the opposition deserves to celebrate. Modiās power has been constrained and the myth of his invincibility wounded, perhaps mortally. Indian voters, like those in Brazil and Poland before them, have dealt a major blow to their homegrown authoritarian faction.
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PM Modi has reduced his convoy size to just two cars.....
I fully back @PM Modi's call for austerity measures....
But austerity must be guided by cost-benefit analysis, not emotion. Reducing Prime Minister's security convoy is downright suicidal and exactly what our enemies want.